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Book of Poetry for Children
 0394850106, 0394950100

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T H E

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F O E T M

lEBIREM

SELECTED

AND

INTRODUCED

BY

Jack Prelutsky

I L L U S T R AT E D

BY

Arnold Lobel

opening Poems for Each Section Especially Written for This Anthology by Jack Prelutsky

RANDOM

HOUSE

NEW

YORK

Ji A C K N O W L E D G M E N T S

Every effort has been made to trace the ownership of all copyrighted material and to secure the necessary permissions to reprint these selec¬

tions. In the event of any question arising as to the use of any material, the editor and the publisher, while expressing regret for any inadvertent error, will be happy to make the necessary correction in future printings. Grateful acknowledgment is made to the following for permission to reprint the copyrighted material listed below: Abingdon Press for “Thanksgiving” from cherry stones! garden SWINGS! by Ivy O. Eastwick. Copyright ©1962 by Abingdon Press. “Flight Plan” from all daffodils are daffy by Jane Merchant. Copy¬

right ©1966 by Abingdon Press. Reprinted by permission. Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, Inc., for “The Secret Song” and “Green Stems” from nibble nibble by Margaret Wise Brown. Copyright ©1959 by Margaret Wise Brown. “Oodles of Noodles” and “Tomb¬ stone” from OODLES of noodles by Lucia M. and James L. Hymes, Jr.

Copyright ©1964 by Lucia M. and James L. Hymes, Jr. AYoung Scott Book. “1 Am Rose” from the world is round by Gertrude Stein. Copyright 1939 by Gertrude Stein, renewed 1967 by Daniel C. Joseph.

“Up in the Pine” from blueberries lavender by Nancy Dingman Watson. Copyright ©1977 by Nancy Dingman Watson. Reprinted by

permission of Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, Inc. Associated Book Publishers Ltd. for “Sensitive, Seldom and Sad” from RHYMES WITHOUT REASON by Mervyn Peake. Published by Methuen

Children’s Books. “Green Candles” from the unknown goddess by Humbert Wolfe. Published by Methuen 6c Co. Reprinted by permission of Associated Book Publishers Ltd.

Livingston. Copyright ©1980 by Myra Cohn Livingston. AMargaret K. McElderry Book (New York: Atheneum, 1980). “Little Bits of SoftBoiled Egg” from Achild’s book of manners by Fay Maschler. Text copyright ©1978 by Fay Maschler (New York: Atheneum, 1979; Lon¬ don: Jonathan Cape, 1978). “Misnomer” from rainbow writing by Eve Merriam. Copyright ©1976 by Eve Merriam (New York: Athe¬ neum, 1976). “Two People” from Aword or two with you by Eve Merriam. Copyright ©1981 by Eve Merriam (New York: Atheneum, 1982). “Something Is There” from see my lovely poison ivy by Lilian

Moore. Copyright ©1975 by Lilian Moore (New York: Atheneum, 1975). “Pigeons” and “Foghorns” from ithought iheard the chy by Lilian Moore. Copyright ©1969 by Lilian Moore (New York: Athe¬ neum, 1969). “Ground Hog Day” from think of shadows by Lilian Moore. Copyright ©1975, 1980 by Lilian Moore (New York: Athe¬ neum, 1980). “Waking,” “Until ISaw the Sea,” and “Hey, Bug!” from i FEEL the same WAY by Lilian Moore. Copyright ©1967 by Lilian Moore (New York: Atheneum, 1967). “TheToad” from cornucopia by Robert S. Oliver. Copyright ©1978 by Robert S. Oliver (New York: Atheneum, 1978). “Tag Along,” “Chocolate Cake,” and “Bubble Gum” from all

the day long by Nina Payne. Copyright ©1973 by Nina Payne (New York: Atheneum, 1973). “To Dark Eyes Dreaming” from today is SATURDAY by Zilpha Keatley Snyder. Copyright ©1969 by Zilpha Keatley Snyder (New York: Atheneum, 1969). “Zebra” and “Lumps” from flashlight and other poems by Judith Thurman. Copyright ©1976

by Judith Thurman (New York: Atheneum, 1976). “Some Things Don't Make Any Sense at All,” “Mother Doesn’t Want aDog,” and “Since Hanna Moved Away” from if iwere in charge of the world and OTHER stories by Judith Viorst. Copyright ©1981 by Judith Viorst

(New York: Atheneum, 1981). Reprinted by permission of Atheneum Publishers, Inc.

Atheneum Publishers, Inc., for “The Mandrill” from cats and bats and

things with wings by Conrad Aiken. Copyright ©1965 by Conrad Aiken (New York: Atheneum, 1965). “John” from let's marry said the cherry, and other nonsense poems by N. M. Bodecker. Copvright ©1974 by N. M. Bodecker. AMargaret K. McElderry Book (New York: Atheneum, 1974). “When All the World Is Full of Snow,” “Sing Me aSong of Teapots and Trumpets,” and “Good-by My Winter Suit”

Patricia Ayres for “Sing aSong of Subways” from the inner city MOTHER goose by Eve Merriam. Text copyright ©1969 by Eve Mer¬ riam. “Umbilical” from finding apoem by Eve Merriam. Copyright ©

from hurry, hurry, mary dear, and other nonsense poems by

Gene Baro for “The Ferns.”

N. M. Bodecker. Copyright ©1976 by N. M. Bodecker. AMargaret K. McElderry Book (New York: Atheneum, 1976). "A Wolf ...” from songs

of

the

dream

people:

chants

and

images

from

the

INDIANS

AND ESKIMOS OF NORTH AMERICA, James Houstoii, editor. Copyright ©

1972 by James Houston. AMargaret K. McElderry Book (New York: Atheneum, 1972). “Concrete Mixers” from 8a.m. shadows by Patricia Hubbell. Copyright ©1965 by Patricia Hubbell (New York: Atheneum, 1965). “Message from aMouse, Ascending in aRocket” from catch me aWIND by Patricia Hubbell. Copyright ©1968 by Patricia Hubbell (New York: Atheneum, 1968). “Our Washing Mach i n e from THE APPLE VENdor’s FAIR by Patricia Hubbell. Copyright ©1963 by Patricia Hubbell (New York: Atheneum, 1963). “History” from the way things are and other poems by Myra Cohn Livingston. Copyright ©1974 by Myra Cohn Livingston. AMargaret K. McElderry Book (New York: Athe¬ neum, 1974). “12 October” from the malibu and other poems by Myra Cohn Livingston. Copyright ©1972 by Myra Cohn Livingston. A Margaret K. McElderry Book (New York: Atheneum, 1972). “Martin Luther King” from no way of knowing: Dallas poems by Myra Cohn

Copyright ©1983 by Random House, Inc.

All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published in the United States by Random House, Inc., New York, and simultaneously in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto.

1970 by Eve Merriam. “What in the World?” from there is no rhyme

for silver by Eve Merriam. Copyright ©1962 by Eve Merriam. Re¬ printed by permission of the author.

Marjorie Barrows for “The Bug,” reprinted from Child Life Mcigcizine, Rand McNally &c Company. Kenneth C. Bennett for “Thanksgiving Magic” by Rowena Bastin Ben¬ nett. Reprinted by permission of Kenneth C. Bennett, agent for Rowena Bennett.

The Bobbs-Merrill Company, Inc., for “My Brother Bert” from meet my FOLKS by Ted Hughes. Copyright ©1961, 1973 by Ted Hughes. Re¬ printed by permission of the publisher, The Bobbs-Merrill Company, Inc. Canadian rights administered by Faber and Faber Publishers. Curtis Brown, Ltd., for “Ghosts” from the golden hive by Harry Behn. Copyright ©1957, 1962, 1966 by Harry Behn. Published by Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. “Jonathan Bing” from Jonathan bing and other verses by Beatrice Curtis Brown. Copyright 1929 by Beatrice Curtis Brown, renewed 1957. Published by Oxford University Press. “Wres¬ tling,” “Foilo w the Leader,” and “Broom Balancing” from stilts, somersaults and headstands by Kathleen Fraser. Copyright ©1968 by Kathleen Fraser. Published by Atheneum. “Girls Can, Too!” from girls can, TOO! by Lee Bennett Hopkins. Copyright ©1972 by Lee Bennett Hopkins. Published by Franklin Watts. “Accidentally” from no one writes aletter to asnail by Maxine Kumin. Copyright ©1962 by Maxine Kumin. Published by G. P. Putnam’s Sons. “J’s the Jumping JayWalker” from ALL around the town by Phyllis McGinley. Copyright 1948 by Phyllis McGinley. renewed 1976. Published by J. B. Lippincott. “We’re Racing, Racing down the Walk” from sugar and spice—the

ABC OF being aGIRL by PhylHs McGinley. Copyright ©1959, 1960 by Phyllis McGinley. Published by Franklin Watts. “Homework” from BREAKFAST, BOOKS 6c DREAMS by Jane Yolen. Copyright ©1981 by Jane

Yolen. Published by Frederick Warne. Reprinted by permission of Curtis

Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data

Brown, Ltd.

Main entry under title:

Curtis Brown Group Limited for “My Name Is ...” from silver bells AND COCKLE SHELLS by Pauline Clarke. Copyright ©1962 by Pauline Clarke. Reprinted by permission of Curtis Brown Group Limited, Lon¬

The Random House book of poetry for children. “Opening poems for each section especially

written for this anthology by Jack Prelutsky.” Includes indexes.

Summary: More than 550 poems by American, English, and anonymous authors. 1. Children’s poetry, American. 2. Children’s poetry, English. [1. American poetry—Collections. 2. English poetry—Collections] I. Prelutsky, Jack. II. Lobel, Arnold, ill. PS586.3.R36 1983

8 11 ' . 0 0 8 ' 0 9 2 8 2

ISBN 0-394-85010-6

ISBN 0-394-95010-0 (lib. bdg.) Manufactured in the United Stares of America

83-2990

don.

The Witter Bynner Foundation for Poetry, Inc., for “The Sandpiper” from ACANTICLE OF PAN by Witter Bynner. Copyright 1920 by Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., renewed 1948 by Witter Bynner. Reprinted by permission of The Witter Bynner Foundation for Poetry, Inc. The Caxton Printers Ltd. for “Beside the Line of Elephants” from pick¬ pocket SONGS by Edna Becker (Caldwell, Idaho: The Caxton Printers Ltd.). Reprinted by permission. Miriam Chaikin for “1 Hate Harry.” Reprinted by permission of the author. “Ms. Whatchamacallit Thingamajig,” reprinted from Woman's Day. Copyright ©1980 by Miriam Chaikin. Reprinted by permission of t h e a u t h o r.

5 Chatto and Windus Ltd. for “Lone Dog” from songs to save asoul by Irene Rutherford McLeod. Reprinted by permission of the Author’s

E. C. Publications, Inc., for “The Bat’’ from mad for better or verse. Copyright ©1968,1975 by Frank Jacobs and E. C. Publications, Inc.

Literary Estate and Chatto and Windus Ltd.

Norma Millay Ellis, Literary Executor, for “Travel” from collected

Clarion Books for “Night Comes’’ from abunch of poems and verses by Beatrice Schenk de Regniers. Copyright ©1976 by Beatrice Schenk de Regniers. Published by Clarion Books, Ticknor &Fields: AHoughton Mifflin Company.

poems by Edna St. Vincent Millay. Copyright 1921, 1948 by Edna St.

Elizabeth Coatsworth for “Country Barnyard’’ from night and the

Farrar, Straus &Giroux, Inc., for “basketball” from spin asoft black

C A T .

Joanna Cole for “Driving to the Beach.” Copyright ©1973 bv Joanna Cole.

William Cole for “Sneaky Bill,” “Banananananananana,” and “Did

You?” by William Cole. Copyright ©1977 by William Cole. "Valentine” by Shel Silverstein. Copyright ©1961 by Shel Silverstein. Commonweal Publishing Co., Inc., for “Godmother” by Phyllis B. Morden.

Vincent Millay. Published by Harper 8c Row.

Evans Brothers Limited for “Rainy Nights” from come follow me by Irene Thompson. SONG by Nikki Giovanni. Copyright ©1971 by Nikki Giovanni. Re¬ printed Giroux, ©1972 Giroux,

by permission of Hill and Wang, aDivision of Farrar, Straus 8c Inc. “Crickets” from small poems by Valerie Worth. Copyright by Valerie Worth. Reprinted by permission of Farrar, Straus 8c Inc.

Four Winds Press for “Wendy in Winter” from the covered bridge

HOUSE and other POEMS by Kaye Starbird jennison. Copyright ©1979 by Kaye Starbird Jennison. Reprinted by permission of Four Winds Press, aDivision of Scholastic Inc.

Hilda Conkling for “Dandelion.” Reprinted by permission of the author. Mary Elizabeth Counselman for “Gift with the Wrappings Off.”

Martin Gardner for “Soap” and “Barbershop.”

Lenski Covey Foundation, Inc.

Grosser 8c Dunlap, Inc., for “Rhyme” from the sparrow bush by Elizabeth Coatsworth. Copyright ©1966 by Grosser 8c Dunlap, Inc. “The Sparrow Hawk” and “The Tin Frog” from the pedaling man by Russell Hoban. Copyright ©1968 by Russell Hoban. Reprinted by permission of Grosser 8c Dunlap, Inc.

Delacorte Press for “Lion” from laughing time bv William Jay Smith.

Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, Inc., for “Ladybiig” from morning is a

Copyright© 1953, 1955, 1956, 1957, 1959, 1968, 1974,1977, 1980 by

LITTLE child by Joan Walsh Anglund. Copyright ©1969 by Joan Walsh Anglund. “Growing Up” and “Trees” from the little hill by Harry Behn. Copyright 1949 by Harry Behn, renewed 1977 by Alice L. Behn.

The Lois Lenski Covey Foundation, Inc., for “Sing aSong of People” from THE LIFE Ilive by Lois Lenski. Copyright ©1965 by The Lois Lenski Covey Foundation, Inc. Reprinted by permission of The Lois

William Jay Smith. Reprinted by permission of Delacorte Press/Seymour Lawrence. “Unicorn,” “The Toaster,” “Seal,” “Love,” and “Jittery Jim”

from laughing time bv William lay Smith. Copyright ©1953, 1955, 1956, 1957, 1959, 1968, 1974, 1977, 1980 by William Jay Smith. Reprinted by permission of Delacorte Press/Seymour Lawrence. AMerloyd Lawrence Book.

“maggie and milly and molly and may” from complete poems

Dewes 8c Son for “Who’s In” by Elizabeth Fleming. Reprinted by permis¬

tic” from THE complete poems of carl SANDBURG. Copyright 1950 by Carl Sandburg, renewed 1978 by Margaret Sandburg, Helga Sandburg Crile, and Janet Sandburg. “Buffalo Dusk” from s.moke and steel by Carl Sandburg. Copyright 1920 by Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, Inc.,

sion of Alison Fleming. The Dial Press for “LiP Bro’” and “Basketball Star” from my daddy is a

COOL DUDE AND OTHER POEMS by Karama Fufuka. Copyright ©1975 by Karama Fufuka. Reprinted by permission of The Dial Press. Dennis Dobson Publishers for “On the Ning Nang Nong,” “A Thousand Hairy Savages,” and “You Must Never Bath in an Irish Stew” from silly VERSE FOR kids by Spike Milligan. Candida Donadio 8c Associates, Inc., for “Number Nine, Penwiper

Mews” and “Lord Cray” from amphigorey by Edward Gorey. Copy¬

right ©1972 by Edward Gorey. Reprinted by permission of Candida Donadio 8c Associates, Inc. Canadian rights administered by Deborah Rogers Ltd.

Doubleday 8c Company, Inc., for “If Once You Have Slept on an Island” from TAXIS AND toadstools by Rachel Field. Copyright 1926 by The

Century Company. “Mice” from FiF'n-ONE new nursery rhymes by Rose Fyleman. Copyright 1932 by Doubleday 8c Company, Inc. Cana¬

dian rights administered by The Society of Authors. “Easter” from

poems, essays and letters by Joyce Kilmer. Copyright 1914 by Harriet Monroe. “Feelings About Words” from words, words, words by Mary

O’Neill. Copyright© 1966 by Mary O’Neill. "What Is Red?” and "What Is Orange?” from hailstones and halibut bones by Mary O'Neill. Copyright ©1961 by Mary Le Due O’Neill. “Miss Norma Jean Pugh”

from PEOPLE i'd like to keep by Mary O’Neill. Copyright ©1964 by Mary O'Neill. “The Serpent” and "The Sloth” from the collected poems of THEODORE ROETHKE. Copyright 1950 by Theodore Roethke. "The Lizard” from the collected poems of theodore roethke.

1913-1962 by e. e. cummings. Copyright ©1956 by e. e. cummings. “Keep aPoem in Your Pocket” from something special by Beatrice Schenk de Regniers. Copyright ®1958 by Beatrice Schenk de Regniers. “Arithme¬

renewed 1948 by Carl Sandburg. “Fog” from Chicago poems by Carl Sandburg. Copyright 1916 by Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Inc., renewed

1944 by Carl Sandburg. “The Opposite of Two” from opposites by Richard Wilbur. Copyright ©1973 by Richard Wilbur. Reprinted by permission of Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, Inc. Harper poems warth. BOYS

8: Row, Publishers, Inc., for “First Snow” from apocketful of by Marie Louise Allen. Copyright ©1957 by Marie Allen Ho“Keziah” and “Rudolph Is Tired of the City” from bronzeville AND GIRLS by Gwendolyn Brooks. Copyright ©1956 by Gwendo¬

lyn Brooks Blakely. “The Spangled Pandemonium” from beyond the PAWPAW TREES by Palmer Brown. Copyright 1954 by Palmer Brown.

“The Myra Song” from the monster den by John Ciardi. Copyright © 1963, 1964, 1966 by John Ciardi. “What Someone Said When He Was

Spanked on the Day Before His Birthday” from you know who by John Ciardi. Copyright ©1964 by John Ciardi. “Mummy Slept Late and Daddy Fixed Breakfast” from you read to me, i’ll read to you by

John Ciardi. Copyright ©1962 by John Ciardi. “A Dragonfly” from ELEANOR farjeon’s POEMS FOR CHILDREN. Copyright 1933, 1961 by Eleanor Farjeoii. “The Children’s Carol” from eleanor farjeon's POEMS FOR children. Copyright 1927, 195 1by Eleanor Farjeon. “The Wi tc h ! Th e Wi tc h !” fr o m e l e a n o r fa r j e o n ’s p o e m s fo r c h i l d r e n .

Copyright 1926, 1951 by Eleanor Farjeon. "Bliss,” “Poetry,” and “Yiiwning” from eleanor farjeon’s poems for children. Copyright 1938, 1951 by Eleanor Farjeon. “Merry Christmas” from feathered

“The Bat” from the collected poems of Theodore roethke. Copy¬

ONES AND FURRY by Ailccn Fisher. Copyright ©1971 by Aileen Fisher. “Light the Festive Candles” and “On Mother's Day” from skip around the year by Aileen Fisher. Copyright ©1967 by Aileen Fisher. “Egg

right 1938 by Theodore Roethke. "I Am Cherry Alive” from summer

by Russell Hoban. Copyright ©1964, 1972 by Russell Hoban. "Spring”

Copyright ©1961 by Theodore Roethke. “Dinky” from the collected POEMS OF THEODORE ROETHKE. Copyright 1953 by Theodore Roethke. knowledge, new and selected poems by Delmore Schwartz. “Could It Have Been aShadow?” from goose grass rhymes by Monica Shan¬

non. Copyright 1930 by Doubleday 8: Company, Inc. “How to Tell Goblins from Elves” from goose grass rhymes by Monica Shannon. Copyright 1930 by Monica Shannon Wing. "The Blackbird” from Ken¬ sington gardens by Humbert Wolfe. Canadian rights administered by Ann Wolfe. “The Pig” and “The Flea” from not for children by Roland Young. Reprinted by permission of Doubleday 8c Company, Inc. E. P. Dutton 8c Co., Inc., for “The Wrong Start” from rhymes about us by Marchette Chute. Copyright ©1974 by Marchettc Chute. “Wiggly Giggles” from me is how ifeel: poems by Stacy Jo Crossen and Natalie Anne Coveil. Copyright ©1970 by A. Harris Stone, Stacy Crossen, Natalie Coveil, and Victoria deLarrea. “How Strange It Is” from poems OF EARTH AND SPACE by Claudia Lewis. Copyright ©1967 by Claudia Lewis. “The More It Snows” from the house at pooh corner by A, A.

Milne. Copyright 1928 by E. P. Dutton 8c Co., Inc., renewed 1956 by A. A. Milne. Canadian rights administered by McClelland and Stewart Ltd. Reprinted by permission of the publisher, E. P. Dutton 8c Co., Inc.

Thoughts,” “Homework,” and “Stupid Old Myself” from egg thoughts and “The Middle of the Night” from dogs and dragons, trees and

DREAMS by Karla Kuskin. Copyright ©1958 by Karla Kuskin. “A Bug Sat in aSilver Flower” from dogs and dragons, trees and drea.ms by

Karla Kuskin. Copyright ©1975 by Karla Kuskin. “Me” and “Rules” from dogs and dragons, trees and dreams by Karla Kuskin. Copy¬ right ©1962 by Karla Kuskin. “Winter Clothes” from the rose on my

CAKE by Karla Kuskin. Copyright ©1964 by Karla Kuskin. “Frighten¬ ing” from UP AND down the river by Claudia Lewis. Copyright ©1979 by Claudia Lewis. “Daylight Saving Time” from wonderful time by Phyllis McGinley. Copyright ©1965, 1966 by Phyllis McGinley. "When Mosquitoes Make aMeal” from the winds that come from far away

by Else Holmelund Minarik. Copyright ©1964 by Else Holmelund Minarik. “Six Weeks Old” from chimney smoke by Christopher Morley. Copyright 1921, 1949 by Christopher Morley. “The Plumpuppets” from the rocking horse by Christopher Morley. Copyright 1919 by Harper 8c Row, Publishers, Inc., renewed 1947 by Christopher Morley. '''These Are the Beds ...” from the bed book by Sylvia Plath. Copyright ©1976 by Ted Hughes. Canadian rights administered by Olwyn Hughes.

6 “October” from chicken soup with rice by Maurice Sendak. Copy¬ right ©1962 by Maurice Sendak. “Hug O’ War,” “Jimmy Jet and His

Michael Joseph Ltd. for “The Ants at the Olympics” and “The Duck”

TV Set,” and “Wart” from where the sidewalk ends by Shel Silver-

seph Ltd.

stein. Copyright ©1974 by Shel Silverstein. “Pie Problem” and “The Little Boy and the Old Man” from alight in the attic by Shel Silver¬ stein. Copyright ©1981 by Shel Silverstein. “Sunning” from crickety

May Justus for “Jessica Jane” and “The Rain Has Silver Sandals.” Re¬ printed by permission of the author and Abingdon Press.

CRICKET! the BEST LOVED POEMS OF JAMES S. TIPPETT. Copyright 1933

by Harper &Row, Publishers, Inc., renewed ©1961 by Martha K. Tippett. “Huckleberry, Gooseberry, Raspberry” from father fox’s pennyrhymes by Clyde Watson. Copyright ©1971 by Clyde Watson. “Yip-yap Rattletrap” from quips &quirks by Clyde Watson. Copyright ©1975 by Clyde Watson. “People” from all that sunlight by Char¬ lotte Zolotow. Copyright ©1967 by Charlotte Zolotow. “River Wind¬ ing” and “A Moment in Summer” from river winding by Charlotte Zolotow. Copyright ©1970 by Charlotte Zolotow. William Heinemann Ltd. for “The Hairy Dog” from pillicock hill by Herbert Asquith. “The Wind,” “Mr. Kartoffel,” and “Doctor Emman¬ uel” by James Reeves. “The Bogus-Boo” from more prefabulous aniMALES by James Reeves.

from ANIMAL ALPHABET by Richard Digance. Published by Michael Jo¬

Kansas City Star Company for “The Winning of the TV West” by John T. A l e x a n d e r.

Bobbi Katz for “Patience,” copyright ©1979. “The Runaway,” copy¬ right ©1981. “Samuel,” copyright ©1972. “Spring Is,” copyright © 1979 “T-hings [q Do If You Are aSubway,” copyright ©1970. Sidney B. Kramer for “Song” from the cantilever rainbow by Ruth Krauss. Copyright ©1965,1976 by Ruth Krauss. B. J. Lee for “Eight Witches” by B. J. Lee (pseudonym for Leland B. Jacobs) from arithmetic in verse and rhyme, Allan D. Jacobs and Leland B. Jacobs, editors. Copyright ©1971 by Leland B. Jacobs. Pub¬ lished by Garrard Publishing Co. Dennis Lee for “Double-Barreled Ding-Dong-Bat” and “Freddy” by Dennis Lee from breakfast, books &dreams, Michael Patrick Hearn,

Margaret Hillert for “About Feet” and “Just Me.”

editor. Copyright© 1981 by Dennis Lee. Published by Frederick Warne.

Mary Ann Hoberman for “Night” from hello and good-by.

Little, Brown and Company for “The Waltzer in the House” from the poems of STANLEY KUNiTZ 1928-1978. Copyright ©1958 by Stanley Kunitz. “Mr. Bidery’s Spidery Garden” and “Every Time IClimb aTree” from ONE AT Atime: his collected poems for the young by David McCord. Copyright ©1952, 1970 by David McCord. “Yellow" and #8 from “A Christmas Package: Nine Poems” from away and ago: rhymes

Hodder &c Stoughton Limited for “House. For Sale” from the singing TIME by Leonard Clark. Holiday House, Inc., for “What’s That?” by Florence Parry Heide from

monster poems, Daisy Wallace, editor. Copyright ©1976 by Florence Parry Heide. “Witches’ Menu” by Sonja Nikolay from witch poems,

Daisy Wallace, editor. Copyright ©1976 by Holiday House, Inc. Re¬ printed by permission of Holiday House, Inc.

OF THE never WAS AND ALWAYS IS by David McCord. Copyright ©1968, 1974 by David McCord. “To Walk in Warm Rain” from speak up: more

RHYMES OF THE NEVER WAS AND ALWAYS IS by David McCord. Copyright

Felice Holman for “Sulk” from ihear you smiling and other poems

©1979, 1980 by David McCord. “Adventures of Isabel” from the bad

by Felice Holman. Copyright ©1973 by Felice Holman (New York:

parents’ garden of VERSE by Ogden Nash. Copyright 1936 by Ogden Nash. “The People Upstairs,” copyright 1949 by Ogden Nash. “The Cow,” copyright 1931 by Ogden Nash. First appeared in The Saturday Evening Post. “Celery,” copyright 1941 by The Curtis Publishing Com¬

Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1973). Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Publishers, for “The Walrus” and “The

Hummingbird” from creatures great and small by Michael Flanders. Copyright ©1964 by Michael Flanders. “Dust of Snow,” “Stopping by Woods on aSnowy Evening,” and “Fireflies in the Garden” from the POETRY OF ROBERT FROST, Edward Connery Lathem, editor. Copyright 1923, 1928, ©1969 by Holt, Rinehart and Winston. Copyright 1951, ©1956 by Robert Frost. “To an Aviator” from bright harbor by Daniel Whitehead Hicky. Copyright 1932, ©1960 by Daniel Whitehead Hicky. “Queenie” from alphabet of girls by Leland B. Jacobs. Copy¬ right ©1969 by Leland B. Jacobs. “That May Morning” and “Taste of Purple” from is somewhere always far away? by Leland B. Jacobs. Copyright ©1967 by Leland B. Jacobs. “Steam Shovel” from upper pasture by Charles Malam. Copyright 1930, ©1958 by Charles Malam. Reprinted by permission of Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Publishers.

The Horn Book, Inc., for “One Day When We Went Walking” by Valine Hobbs, reprinted from The Horn Book Magazine, ]anu^ry 1947. Copy¬ right ©1947 by The Horn Book, Inc.

Houghton Mifflin Company for “Read This with Gestures” from fast and slow by John Ciardi. Copyright ©1975 by John Ciardi. “I Wish I Could Meet the Man That Knows” from imet aman by John Ciardi. Copyright ©1961 by John Ciardi. “Tony Baloney” and “Alligator Pie” from ALLIGATOR PIE by Dennis Lee. Copyright ©1974 by Dennis Lee. Canadian rights administered by Macmillan of Canada, aDivision of Gage Publishing Limited. “The Muddy Puddle” from garbage delight by Dennis Lee. Copyright ©1977 by Dennis Lee. Canadian rights admin¬ istered by Macmillan of Canada, aDivision of Gage Publishing Limited. “Sea Shell” from the complete poetical works of amy lowell.

Copyright 1955 by Houghton Mifflin Company. “Oliphaunt” from the adventures of tom bombadil by j. R. R. Tolkien. Copyright ©1962 by George Allen &c Unwin Ltd. Canadian rights administered by George Allen 6c Unwin Ltd. Reprinted by permission of Houghton Mifflin

pany. First appeared in The Saturday Evening Post. “The Canary,”

copyright 1940 by The Curtis Publishing Company. First appeared in The Saturday Evening Post. “The Wendigo,” copyright 1953 by Ogden Nash. “The Pizza,” copyright ©1957 by Ogden Nash. All from verses FROM 1929 ON by Ogden Nash. “Eletelephony” from tirra lirra: RHYMES OLD AND NEW by Laura E. Richards. Copyright 1932 by Laura E. Richards, renewed 1960 by Hamilton Richards. Reprinted by permis¬ sion of Little, Brown and Company. Liveright Publishing Corporation for “hist whist” from tulips and CHIMNEYS by e. e. cummings. Reprinted by permission of Liveright Publishing Corporation. Copyright 1923, 1925 by e. e. cummings, re¬ newed 1951,1953 by e. e. cummings. Copyright ©1973,1976 by Nancy T. Andrews. Copyright ©1973, 1976 by George James Firmage. Barbara Kunz Loots for “Mountain Wind.”

McGraw-Hill Book Company for “Maple Feast” and “The Sandpiper” from THE little whistler by Frances Frost. Copyright 1949 by McGrawHill Book Company. “Night Heron” from the little naturalist by Frances Frost. Copyright ©1959 by Frances Frost and Kurt Werth. Reprinted by permission of McGraw-Hill Book Company. McIntosh and Otis, Inc., for “Rhinos Purple, Hippos Green” from break¬ fast, BOOKS &dreams by Michael Patrick Hearn. Copyright ©1981 by Michael Patrick Hearn. Published by Frederick Warne. “Fishes’ Evening Song” from whispering and other things by Dahlov Ipcar. Copyright ©1967 by Dahlov Ipcar. Published by Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. Reprinted by permission of McIntosh and Otis, Inc. Gail Kredenser Mack for “Polar Bear” and “Brontosaurus” from the ABC OF BUMPTIOUS BEASTS by Gail Kredenser. Copyright ©1966 by Gail

Kredenser. Published by Harlin Quist.

Company.

Macmillan Accounts and Administration Ltd. for “Camel” from brown-

Barbara A. Huff for “The Library.” Copyright ©by Barbara A. Huff.

JOHN’S BEASTS by Alan Brownjohn. Reprinted by permission of Macmil¬ lan, London and Basingstoke (The Macmillan Company of Canada,

Olwyn Hughes for “Roger the Dog” from afirst poetry book by Ted Hughes. Published by Oxford University Press. Instructor Publications, Inc., for “A Football Game” by Alice Van Eck,

reprinted from Instructor, November 1960. Copyright ©1960 by The F. A. Owen Publishing Company. “Holding Hands” by Lenore Link, reprinted from St. Nicholas Magazine, June 1936. Published by Macmil¬ lan in 1937 in under the tent of the sky, John E. Brewton, editor. Reprint rights now controlled by The Instructor Publications, Inc.

Copyright by The Instructor Publications, Inc. Reprinted by permission. International Creative Management for “Mark’s Fingers” from fingers are always bringing me news by Mary O’Neill. Copyright ©1969 by Mary O’Neill. Published by Doubleday &Company, Inc.

Robert C. Jackson for “Grandpa Dropped His Glasses” and “Beela by the Sea” by Leroy F. Jackson.

Barbara Boyden Jordan for “Mud” by Polly Chase Boyden.

Ltd.).

Macmillan Publishing Co., Inc., for “Mountain Brook” from summer GREEN by Elizabeth Coatsworth. Copyright 1948 by Macmillan Publish¬ ing Co., Inc., renewed 1976 by Elizabeth Coatsworth Beston. “Sea Gull” from summer green by Elizabeth Coatsworth. Copyright 1947 by Mac¬ millan Publishing Co., Inc., renewed 1975 by Elizabeth Coatsworth

Beston. “Something Told the Wild Geese” and “The Performing Seal” from BRANCHES green by Rachel Field. Copyright 1934 by Macmillan Publishing Co., Inc., renewed 1962 by Arthur S. Pederson. “The Seven

Ages of Elf-hood” from poems by Rachel Field. Copyright 1926 by Macmillan Publishing Co., Inc., renewed 1954 by Arthur S. Pederson. “City Lights” and “Some People” from poems by Rachel Field. Copy¬ right ©1957 by Macmillan Publishing Co., Inc. “The Chipmunk’s Song” from THE BAT-POET by Randall Jarrell. Copyright ©1963, 1964 by Macmillan Publishing Co., Inc. “The Moon’s the North Wind’s Cooky”

7 from COLLECTED POEMS by Vachel Lindsay. Copyright 1914 by Macmil¬ lan Publishing Co., Inc., renewed 1942 by Elizabeth C. Lindsay. “Check” from COLLECTED POEMS by James Stephens. Copyright 1915 by Macmil¬ lan Publishing Co., Inc., renewed 1943 by James Stephens. “Little Things” from collected poems by James Stephens. Copyright 1926 by Macmillan Publishing Co., Inc., renewed 1954 by Cynthia Stephens. Canadian rights administered by Iris Wise and Macmillan, London and Basingstoke (The Macmillan Company of Canada, Ltd.). “February Twilight” from collected poems by Sara Teasdale. Copyright 1926 by Macmillan Publishing Co., Inc., renewed 1954 by Mamie T. Wheless. “To aSquirrel at Kyle-Na-No” from collected poems by William Butler Yeats. Copyright 1919 by Macmillan Publishing Co., Inc., renewed 1947 by Bertha Georgie Yeats. Canadian rights administered by A. P. Watt Ltd. Reprinted by permission of Macmillan Publishing Co., Inc. Josephine Curry McNatt for “Smells” from poems for Josephine by Kathryn Worth.

Methuen, Inc., for “Grandpa Bear’s Lullaby” from dragon night and OTHER lullabies by Jane Yolen. Copyright ©1980 by Jane Yolen. Reprinted by permission of the publisher, Methuen, Inc. James N. Miller for “Cat” by Mary Britton Miller. John Travers Moore for “Going Up,” copyright ©1983 by John Travers Moore, and “The Tree Frog,” copyright ©1967 by John Travers Moore. Used by permission of the author. Lillian Morrison for “Just for One Day.” Original poem reprinted by permission of the author. “Air Traveler” by Lillian Morrison. William Morrow 8: Company, Inc., for “My Mouth” and “Chocolate Chocolate” from eats by Arnold Adoff. Copyright ©1979 by Arnold Adoff. Reprinted by permission of Lothrop, Lee 6c Shepard Books (A Division of William Morrow 8c Company, Inc.). “Summer” from coun¬ try pie by Frank Asch. Copyright ©1979 by Frank Asch. “The Sugar Lady,” “Sunrise,” and “Alley Cat School” from city sandwich by Frank Asch. Copyright ©1978 by Frank Asch. “Oh the Toe Test!” from NEVER SAY UGH TO ABUG by Norma Farber. Copyright ©1979 by Norma Farber. Reprinted by permission of Greenwillow Books (A Divis i o n of William Morrow 6c Company, Inc.). “The Reason 1Like Choco¬ late” from VACATION TIME by Nikki Giovanni. Copyright ©1980 by Nikki Giovanni. Reprinted by permission of William iMorrow 6c Com¬

pany, Inc. “Water’s Edge” from who would marry amineral? by Lillian Morrison. Copyright ©1978 by Lillian Morrison. “The Knock¬ out” and “On the Skateboard” from the sidewalk racer and other

POEMS of SPORTS AND ACTION by Lillian Morrison. Copyright ©1977

by Lillian Morrison. Reprinted by permission of Lothrop, Lee 6c Shepard

Plays, Inc., for “Wearing of the Green” from holiday programs for BOYS AND GIRLS by Aileen Fisher. Copyright 1953 by Aileen Fisher. Plays, Inc., Publishers, Boston, MA.

Jack Prelutsky for “Nature Is,” “The Four Seasons,” “Dogs and Cats and Bears and Bats,” “The Ways of Living Things,” “City, Oh, City!,” “Children, Children Everywhere,” “me iam!,” “Home! You’re Where It’s Warm Inside,” “I’m Hungry!,” “Some People 1Know,” “Nonsense! Nonsense!,” “Alphabet Stew,” “Where Goblins Dwell,” and “The Land of Potpourri.” Copyright ©1983 by Jack Prelutsky. Prentice-Hall, Inc., for “Wanted—A Witch’s Cat” from what witches

DO by Shelagh McGee. Copyright ©1980 by Felix Gluck Press, Ltd. Published by Prentice-Hall, Inc., Englewood Cliffs, NJ 07632. The Putnam Publishing Group for “My Nose,” “When,” and “When I Was Lost” from all together by Dorothy Aldis. Copyright 1925-28,

1934, 1939, 1952 by Dorothy Aldis, renewed 1953-56, 1962, 1967. “Everybody Says” from here, there &everywhere by Dorothy Aldis. Copyright 1927, 1928 by Dorothy Aldis, renewed 1955, 1956. “Wasps” from is anybody hungry? by Dorothy Aldis. Copyright ©1964 by Dorothy Aldis. Reprinted by permission of G. P. Putnam’s Sons. “The Alligator” and “Gumble” from stuff &nonsense by Michael Dugan. Copyright ©1974 by William Collins. “The Bluffalo” from how BEASTLY! by Jane Yolen. Copyright ©1980 by Jane Yolen. Reprinted by permission of Philomel Books, aDivision of The Putnam Publishing Group.

Random House, Inc., for “Song of the Ogres” from w. h. auden: col¬ lected POEMS, Edward Mendelson, editor. Copyright ©1968 by W. H.

Auden. Reprinted by permission of Random House, Inc. “Ode to the Pig: His Tail,” “Ode to Spring,” “Thoughts on Talkers,” and “Ants, Al¬ though Admirable, Are Awfully Aggravating” from the collected POEMS of FREDDY THE PIG by Walter R. Brooks. Copyright 1953 by Walter R. Brooks. “Aunt Sponge and Aunt Spiker” from james and the GIANT PEACH by Roaid Dahl. Copyright ©1961 by Roald Dahl. Re¬ printed by permission of Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. “Together” from e.mBRACE: SELECTED LOVE POEMS by Paul Engle. Copyright ©1969 by Paul Engle. Reprinted by permission of Random House, Inc. “The Lizard” from ACHILD'S BESTIARY by John Gardner. Copyright ©1977 by Boskydell Artists, Ltd. “Winter Moon” from selected poems of LANGSTON HUGHES. Copyright 1926 by Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., renewed 1954 by Langston Hughes. “Dreams” and “April Rain Song” from the DREAM KEEPER AND OTHER POEMS by Langston Hughes. Copyright 1932 by Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., renewed 1960 by Langston Hughes. Reprinted by permission of Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. “McIntosh Apple” from sleepy IDA AND OTHER NONSENSE POEMS by Steven Kroll. Copyright ©1977 by

Books (A Division of William Morrow 8c Company, Inc.). “The Darkling Elves” from the headless horseman rides tonight by Jack Prelutsky.

Steven Kroll. “Where Are You Now?” and “The Universe” from all

Copyright© 1980 by Jack Prelutsky. “No Girls Allowed" from rolling

Inc. “They’veAll Gone South” from listen—the birds by Mary Britton

HARVEY DOWN THE HILL by Jack Prelutsky. Copyright ©1980 by Jack Prelutsky. “Wrimples” from the snopp on the sidewalk by Jack Pre¬ lutsky. Copyright ©1976, 1977 by Jack Prelutsky. “Pumberly Pott’s Unpredictable Niece” and “Herbert Glerbett” from the queen of eene

Miller. Copyright ©1961 by Pantheon Books, Inc. “The Contrary Waiter” from stuff 8c nonsense by Edgar Parker. Copyright© 1961 by Edgar Parker. Reprinted by permission of Pantheon Books, aDivision of Random House, Inc. “Too Many Daves” from the sneetches and OTHER STORIES by Dr. Seuss. Copyright 1953, 1954, 1961 by Dr. Seuss. “If We Didn’t Have Birthdays” from happy birthday to you by Dr. Seuss. Copyright ©1959 by Dr. Seuss. Reprinted by permission of Random House, Inc. “January” and “August” from achild’s calendar by John Updike. Copyright ©1965 by John Updike and Nancy Burkert. Reprinted by permission of Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. “My Little Sister” from ALL ON aSUMMER’S DAY by William Wise. Copyright ©1971 by William Wise. Reprinted by permission of Pantheon Books, aDivision of Random

by Jack Prelutsky. Copyright ©1970, 1978 by Jack Prelutsky. “The Bogeyman” and “The Troll” from nightmares by Jack Prelutsky. Copyright ©1976 by Jack Prelutsky. “Long Gone” and “Don’t Ever Sieze aWeasel by the Tail,” copyright ©1967, 1983 by Jack Prelutsky.

Reprinted from zoo doings, copyright ©1983 by Jack Prelutsky. “The Hippopotamus,” copyright ©1970, 1983 by Jack Prelutsky. Reprinted from 200 doings, copyright ©1983 by Jack Prelutsky. “The Lion” and “The Cow,” copyright ©1974, 1983 by Jack Prelutsky. Reprinted from zoo doings, copyright ©1983 by Jack Prelutsky. Reprinted by permis¬ sion of Greenwillow Books (A Division of William Morrow 8c Company,

Inc.). “Crowds” and “Stickball” from subway swinger by Virginia Schonborg. Copyright ©1970 by Virginia Schonborg. Reprinted by permission of William Morrow 6c Company, Inc.

New Directions Publishing Corp. for “Johnnie Crack and Flossie Snail” from UNDER MILK WOOD by Dylan Thomas. Copyright 1954 by New

Directions Publishing Corp. Canadian rights administered by David Higham Associates Limited. “This Is Just to Say” from collected

by William Carlos Williams. Copyright 1938 by New Directions Publishing Corp. Reprinted by permission of New Directions EARLIER

poems

Publishing Corp.

The New Yorker Magazine, Inc., for “Hog-Calling Competition” by Morris Bishop. Copyright ©1936, 1964 by The New Yorker Magazine, Inc. "A Sad Song About Greenwich Village” by Frances Park. Copyright ©1927, 1955 by The New Yorker Magazine, Inc.

ABOARD by Mary Britton Miller. Copyright ©1958 by Pantheon Books,

House, Inc.

Marian Reiner for “Lazy Witch” and “Mr. Pratt” from old mrs. twindlyTART and OTHER RHYMES. Copyright© 1967 by Myra Cohn Livingston. Paul R. Reynolds, Inc., for “Eat-it-all Elaine,” “Measles,” and “Cock¬ roaches” by Kaye Starbird. Copyright ©1963, 1966 by Kaye Starbird. Reprinted by permission of Paul R. Reynolds, Inc., 12 East 41st Street, New York, NY 10017. M a r c i R i d l o n f o r “ M y B r o t h e r ” a n d “ C i t y, C i t y ” f r o m t h a t w a s

SUMMER by Marci Ridlon. Copyright ©1969 by Marci Ridlon. Published by Follett Publishing Co. “Open Hydrant” and “Fernando” by Marci Ridlon.

Michael Rieu for “The Flattered Flying Fish,” “The Lesser Lynx,” “The

Paint Box,” “Sir Smasham Uppe,” “Soliloquy of aTortoise on Revisiting the Lettuce Beds After an Interval of One Hour While Supposed to Be

Sleeping in aClump of Blue Hollyhocks,” and “Two People” by E. V. Rieu.

Bonnie Nims for “How to Get There.” Reprinted by permission of the author. J. Philip O’Hara, the publisher, is no longer in business.

Lady Joan Roberts for “Icc” by Sir Charles Roberts.

Harold Ober Associates for “City” from the langston hughes

READER. Copyright ©1958 by Langston Hughes. Published by Braziller.

POEMS by Ralph Hodgson. Copyright ©1961 by Ralph Hodgson. Ca¬ nadian rights administered by George Allen 8c Unwin Ltd.

S. G. Phillips, Inc., for “I’m Alone in the Evening” from mind your own business by Michael Rosen. Copyright ©1974 by Michael Rosen. Canadian rights administered by Andre Deutsch Ltd.

The Saturday Evening Post Company for “Far Trek” by June Brady. Copyright ©1974. “Hot Line” by Louella Dunann. Copyright ©1972 by The Curtis Publishing Company. Reprinted by permission from The

St. Martin’s Press, Inc., for “The Great Auk’s Ghost” from collected

Saturday Evening Post.

Susan Alton Schmeltz for “Paper Dragons,” reprinted from Cricket Magazine^ volume 6, number 7, March 1979. Copyright ©1979 by Susan M. Schmeltz.

Scholastic Inc. for “Wind-Wolves” by William D. Sargent. Copyright 1926 by Scholastic Inc. Reprinted by permission of Scholastic Inc. (Scho¬ lastic Writing Awards Program).

Frances Schwartz Literary Agency for the following poems by Arnold Spilka: “Don’t Tell Me That 1Talk Too Much!” frcmi and thl trog

Margaret Winsor Stubbs for “This Little Pig Built aSpaceship” from the SPACE child’s MOTHER GOOSE. Catherine R. Sullivan for “Measurement” from selected lyrics and

SONNETS by A. M. Sullivan. Copyright ©1970 by Catherine R. Sullivan (New York: Thomas Y. Crowell, 1970).

Dorothy Brown Thompson for “Maps,” reprinted from Target Magazine. “Our House” and “This Is Halloween,” reprinted from Child Life Magazine. Copyright reassigned to Dorothy Brown Thompson.

!‘BLAH!" Copyright ©1972 by Arnold Spilka. “Flowers .^re aSilly Bunch” from once upon ahorse. Copyright ©1966 by Arnold Spilka. “I'm Really Not Lazy” and “1 Saw aLittle Girl 1Hate” from a RUMBUDGIN. Copyright ©1970 by Arnold Spilka. “Puzzle” from Aljon Ican do without. Copyright ©1964 by Arnold Spilka.

Viking Penguin Inc. for “Changing,” “The Folk Who Live in Backward Town,” “Meg’s Egg,” and “Waiters” from yellow butter purple

Louise H. Sclove for “Habits of the Hippopotamus” and “Routine” from

Hoberman. “Me” and “The Snowflake” from bells and grass by

GAILY THE TROUBADOUR by Arthur Guiterman. “Harvest Home” from

Charles Scribner’s Sons for “Desert Tortoi.se” from desert voices byByrd Baylor. Copyright ©1981 by Byrd Baylor (New York: (Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1981). “Ducks’ Ditty” from the wind in the willows

Walter de la Mare. Copyright 1942 by Walter de la Mare, renewed 1969 by Richard de la Mare. “The People” and “The Rabbit” from under the TREE by Elizabeth Madox Roberts. Copyright 1922 by B. W. Huebsch, renewed 1950 by Ivor S. Roberts. “Joyful” from from summer to summer by Rose Burgunder Styron. Copyright ©1965 by Rose Styron. Reprinted by permission of Viking Penguin Inc.

by Kenneth Grahame. Copyright 1908 by Charles Scribner’s Sons (New

Walker and Company for “Colonel Fazackeriey” from figgie hobbin

BRAVE LAUGHTER by Arthur Guiterman. “The Polliwog” by Arthur Gui¬ terman. Preprinted by permission of Louise H. Sclove.

York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1908). "i Can Fly,” "They’re Calling,” “Leave Me Alone,” and “The City Dump” fronri atthe top of my voice

by Felice Holman. Copyright ©1970 by Felice Holman (New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1970). “Amelia Mixed the Mustard” by A. E. Housman from .my brother, a. e. housman by Laurence Housman. Copyright 1937, 1938 by Laurence Housman, copyrights renewed (New

jelly red JAM BLACK BREAD by Mary Ann Hoberman. Copyright © 1981 by Mary Ann Hoberman. “Clickbeetle” and “Praying Mantis”

from BUGS by Mary Ann Hoberman. Copyright ©1976 by Mary Ann

by Charles Causley. Copyright ©1973 by Charles Causley. Watson-Guptill Publications for “Advice to Small Children” and “Let

Others Share” from every dog has his say by Edward Anthony. Copy¬ right 1947, ©1975 by Watson-Guptill Publications. Reprinted by per¬ mission of Watson-Guptill Publications.

York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1938). Reprinted by permission of Charles Scribner’s Sons. Canadian rights administered by The Society of

A. P. Watt Ltd. for “The Pumpkin” from collected poems by Robert Graves. Reprinted by permission of Robert Graves.

Authors.

Mabel Watts for “Maytime Magic,” reprinted from llumpty Dumpty Magazine, 1954. “The Riveter” by Mabel Watts. Reprinted by permis¬

R. C. Scriven for “The Marrog.”

s i o n o f M a b e l Wa t t s .

Ian Scrraillier for “The Tickle Rhyme” from the monster horse.

Copyright 1950 by Ian Serraillier. Published by Oxford University Press. Richard Shaw for “Cat’s Menu” bv Winifred Crawford (aka Richard Shaw).

Sheed &Ward, Inc., for “Daddy Fell into the Pond” by Alfred Noyes. Copyright 1952 by Sheed &: Ward, Inc. Reprinted by permission of Andrews and McMeel, Inc. All rights reserved. Diane Siebert for “Train Song.” Copyright ©1981 by Diane Siebert. Simon &: Schuster for “Slithergadee” from don't bump the clump! by Shel Silverstein. Copyright ©1964 by Shel Silverstein.

Wesleyan University Press for “The Base Stealer” from the orb weaver by Robert Francis. Copyright ©1960 by Robert Francis. Reprinted by permission of Wesleyan University Press. This poem first appeared in F o r u m .

James T. White &Co. for “Birch Trees” by John Richard Moreland. Xerox Education Publications for “Foul Shot” by Edwin A. Hoey, re¬ printed from Read Magazine. Copyright ©1962 by Xerox Education Publications. Reprinted by permission of Read Magazine. !Adam Ytrmolinsky for “A Pig Is Never Blamed” by Babette Deutsch.

Norah Smaridge for “Why Run?” Copyright ©by Norah Smaridge.

Additional acknowledgments:

William Jay Smith for “Lion” from poems i947_i957 by William Jay Smith. Copyright ©1957 by William Jay Smith. Published by Little, Brown and

Atheneum Publishers, Inc., for “In the Motel” from the phanto.m ice

Company. The Society of Authors for “Tired Tim,” “Some One,” “Silver,” and

“The Horseman” by Walter de la Mare. Reprinted by permission of the Literary Trustees of Walter de la Mare and The Society of Authors as their representative. Jean Conder Soule for “Surprises.” Lloyd Sarett Stockdale for “Four Little Foxes” from covenant with EARTH: Aselection FROM THE POETRY OF LEW SARETT, Alma JohnSOU Sarett, editor. Copvright ©1956 bv Alma Johnson Sarett (Gainesville: The University of Florida Press, 14 56L “The Wolf (ry" from coLU-.( iii> poLxMs Dy Lew Sarett. Copyright ©1969 by Alma Johnson Sarett (Henry

Holt and Company). Reprinted by permission of Lloyd Sarett Stockdale.

crea.m .MAN: .MORE NONSENSE VERSE by X.J. Kennedy. Copyright ©1979 by X.J. Kennedy. AMargaret K. McElderry Book (New York: Atheneum, 1979). “Mother’s Nerves,” “Father and Mother,” and “Help!” from one WINTERINAUGUSTANDOTHERNONSENSEJINGLESbyX.J.Kennedy.Copyright ©1975 by X.J. Kennedy. AMargaret K. McElderry Book (New York: Atheneum, 1975). Reprinted by permission of Atheneum Publishers, Inc. Gretchen Van Meter for “Leopard.” Copyright ©1977 by Gretchen Van Meter. “Leopard” first appeared in Cricket, January 1978, vol. 5, no. 5. “I’m Nobody! Who Are You?” reprinted by permission of the publishers and the Trustees of Amherst College from THE POEMS OF EMILY DICKINSON, edited by Thomas H. Johnson, Cambridge, Mass.: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, Copyright 1951, ©1955,1979,1983 by the Pres¬ ident and Fellows of Harvard College.

9

CONTENTS Introduction

1

8

Windy Nights 27 Robert Louis Stevenson Who Has Seen the Wind? 27 Christina Rossetti Mountain Brook 28

Nature Is ...

2

Auguries of Innocence 22 William Blake

All Things Bright and Beautiful 22

Cecil Frances Alexander

I’m Glad the Sky Is Painted Blue 22

Elizabeth Coatsworth

River Winding 28 Charlotte Zolotow

Water’s Edge 28 Lillian Morrison Mud

28

Polly Chase Boyden The Muddy Puddle 28

Wind’s Cooky 32 Vachel Lindsay The Star 33

Jane Taylor Night Comes 33

Beatrice Schenk de Regniers Night 33 Mary Ann Hoberman Silver 33 Walter de la Mare

The Night Is aBig Black Cat 33 G. Orr Clark

Dennis Lee

Anonymous The Universe 22

Mary Britton Miller Measurement

1

T h e M o o n ’s t h e N o r t h

23

A. M. Sullivan

Sea Shell 29

Amy Lowell The Sea 29

Anonymous

On the Bridge 23 Kate Greenaway

Until ISaw the Sea 29

Flint 23 Christina Rossetti

The Rain Has Silver Sandals 29

The Wolf Cry 24 Lew Sarett

The Secret Song 24 Margaret Wise Brown Fast Rites 24 Christina Rossetti Trees 24

Sara Coleridge The Crocus 25 Wa l t e r C r a n e Dandelion 25

Hilda Conkling The Ferns 25 Gene Baro B i r c h Tr e e s 2 5

John Richard Moreland Wind-Wolves 26

William D. Sargent The Wind 26

James Reeves Mountain Wind 26 Barbara Kunz Loots

Lilian Moore

May Justus Rain Clouds 30

Elizabeth-Ellen Long To W a l k i n W a r m R a i n 3 0 David McCord

Rhyme 30 Elizabeth Coatsworth The More It Snows 30 A. A. Milne First Snow 31 Marie Louise Allen When All the World Is Full of Snow 31 N. M. Bodecker

Stopping By Woods on aSnowy Evening 31 Robert Frost T h e S n o w fl a k e 3 2 Walter de la Mare Check 32

JamesStephens

The Four Seasons 35 The Months 36

Sara Coleridge Four Seasons 36

Anonymous January 36 John Updike Martin Futher King 37 Myra Cohn Livingston Fincoln 37

Nancy Byrd Turner Ground Hog Day 37 Lilian Moore

Beyond Winter 38

Ralph Waldo Emerson Va l e n t i n e 3 8 Shel Silverstein Ice

38

Charles G. D. Roberts

Washington 39 Nancy Byrd Turner Smells 39

Kathryn Worth February Twilight 39 Sara Teasdale

Paper Dragons 40 Susan M. Schmeltz

Maple Feast 40 Frances Frost

10 When

40

Dorothy Aldis

Thanksgiving Magic 46 Rnwena Bastin Bennett

Daylight Saving Time 41 Phyllis McGinley

12 October 46

March

Thanksgiving 47

41

Elizabeth Coatsworth The March Wind 41

Anonymous Wearing of the Green 41 Aileen Fisher

Spring Rain 42 Marchette Chute

Ode to Spring 42 Walter R. Brooks Easter 42

Joyce Kilmer Spring Is 42 Bobbi Katz

On Mother’s Day 43 Aileen Fisher

Spring 43 Karla Kuskin

Myra Cohn Liungston Ivy O. Eastwick

Thanksgiving Day 47 L. Maria Child

Light the Festive Candles 48 Aileen Fisher The Children’s Carol 48

Eleanor Farjeon Winter Moon 48

Langston Hughes

ARocket in My Pocket 44 Anonymous

Maytime Magic 44 M a b e l Wa t t s

Frank Asch

Joyful 44 Rose Burgunder October 45

Thomas Bailey Aldrich October 45 Maurice Sendak

August 45

John Updike Harvest Home 45 Arthur Guiterman

This Is Halloween 46

Dorothy Brown Thompson Lazy Witch 46

Myra Cohn Livingston

The Camel’s Complaint 57 Charles Edward Carryl Buffalo Dusk 58

Carl Sandburg The Hippopotamus 58 Jack Prelutsky Holding Hands 58 Lenore M. Link

Oliphaunt 59 J.R.R. Tolkien The Wolf 59

Georgia Roberts Durst on

Merry Christmas 49

Eour Little Eoxes 60

Aileen Fisher

Edna Becker

Lew Sarett

Erom: AChristmas Package 49 Grandpa Bear’s Lullaby 60 David McCord

AVisit from St. Nicholas 50 Clement Clarke Moore

Jane Yolen

The Lesser Lynx 60 E. V. Rieu Polar Bear 60 Gail Kredenser

Dogs and Cats and Bears and Bats 52 T h e Wa l t z e r i n t h e H o u s e 5 4

Stanley Kunitz Mice

Summer 44

Alan Brownjohn

Beside the Line of Elephants 59

N. M. Bodecker

Charlotte Zolotow

57

IHeard aBird Sing 49 Oliver Herford

Good-by My Winter Suit 43 AMoment in Summer 44

Camel

54

Rose Fyleman

The Chipmunk’s Song 55 Randall Jarrell

The Lion 61

Jack Prelutsky Lion

61

William Jay Smith Leopard 61

Gretchen Kreps Seal 62

William Jay Smith The Performing Seal 63 Rachel Field

To aSquirrel at Kyle-Na-No 55

The Donkey 63

William Butler Yeats

Anonymous

The Rabbit 55 Elizabeth Madox Roberts

The Wild, the Eree 63 Lord Byron

The Hedgehog 56 J.J.Bell

The Mandrill 63

The Bat 56

Ode to the Pig: His Tail 64

Theodore Roethke The Bat 56

Frank Jacobs The Sloth 56 Theodore Roethke

Conrad Aiken

Walter R. Brooks

The Pig 64

Roland Young The Hairy Dog 64 Flerbert Asquith

11

APig Is Never Blamed 64 Babette Deutsch The Cow 64

Ogden Nash

The Boa 79

John Gardner

J.J.Bell 74 Gail Kredenser

Walter R. Brooks

Lone Dog 65

Wasps 74 Dorothy Aldis

Irene McLeod

Sunning 66 James S. Tippett

The Flea 74

Roland Young

Bliss 66

Bug in aJug 74 Anonymous

Eleanor Farjeon I’ve Got aDog 66 Anonymous

The Bug 74 Marjorie Barrows

His Highness’s Dog 66

O h t h e To e - Te s t ! 7 4

Anonymous

Norma Farber

The Cat of Cats 67

When Mosquitoes

William Brighty Rands ACat in Despondency 67 Anonymous The Cats of Kilkenny 67 Anonymous

Make aMeal 74 Else Holmelund Minarik Cockroaches 75

Kaye Starbird ADragonfly 75

Country Barnyard 68

Eleanor Farjeon

Elizabeth Coatsworth

F i r e fl i e s i n t h e G a r d e n 7 6

Cats 68

Robert Frost

Eleanor Farjeon

Caterpillar 76

68

Christina Rossetti

Mary Britton Miller

The Tickle Rhyme 76

Little Things 69 James Stephens

Ian Serraillier

Ladybug 76

Feather or Fur 69

Joan Walsh Anglund

John Becker Menu

Praying Mantis 73 Mary Ann Hoberman

Awfully Aggravating

Ted Hughes

Cat’s

The Lizard 79

Ants, Although Admirable, Are Brontosaurus 79

Roger the Dog 65

Cat

Crickets 73 Va l e r i e Wo r t h

T h e C o d fi s h 7 7

69

Anonymous

Richard Shaw

AWee Little Worm 77

James Whitcomb Riley

The Ways of Living Things

The Flattered Flying Fish 77 E . V. R i e u

71

Jack Prelutsky

Hey, Bug! 72

The Shark 78

Lilian Moore

Hurt No Living Thing

72

Christina Rossetti Green Stems 72

Margaret Wise Brown ABug Sat in aSilver Flower 73 Karla Kuskin

Long Gone 78

Lord Alfred Douglas Fishes’ Evening Song 78 Dahlov Ipcar Sally and Manda 79 Alice B. Campbell

D e s e r t To r t o i s e 8 0

Byrd Baylor

The Frog 81 Hilaire Belloc The Crocodile 81 Lewis Carroll Samuel 81 Bobbi Katz

The Tree Frog 82 John Travers Moore

The Hummingbird 82 Michael Flanders

The Polliwog 82 Arthur Guiterman

Baby Talk 82 Anna Bird Stewart

The Canary 83

Ogden Nash Ducks’ Ditty 83 Kenneth Grahame The Duck 83

Richard Digance The Blackbird 83

Humbert Wolfe Sea Gull 84

Elizabeth Coatsworth

The Sandpiper 84 Frances Frost

The Sandpiper 84 Witter Bynner Something Told the Wild Geese 85 Rachel Field The Hen 85

Lord Alfred Douglas Night Heron 86 Frances Frost

The Vulture 86 Hilaire Belloc

The Sparrow Hawk 87 Russell Hoban

12

The Eagle 87 Alfred Tennyson

ASad Song About Greenwich Village 96 Frances Park

Fog 96

City, Oh, City! 89 Just for One Day 90 Lillian Morrison The Riveter 90 M a b e l Wa t t s Gift with the

Wrappings Off 90 Mary Elizabeth Counselman City, City 91 Marci Ridlon

Sing aSong of Subways 92 Eve Merriam

Things to Do If You

Are aSubway 92 Bobbi Katz

Flowers Are aSilly Bunch 92 Arnold Spilka

Rudolph Is Tired of the City 92 Gwendolyn Brooks

Carl Sandburg Alley Cat School 96 FrankAsch

Open Hydrant 96 Marci Ridlon

April Rain Song 97 Langston Fiughes City Lights 97 Rachel Field

Rainy Nights 97 Irene Thompson

Where Are You Now? 98

Mary Britton Miller Foghorns 98 Lilian Moore

Felice Holman

Dick Dorrance

Sunrise 93

Judith Thurman Crowds

94

Virginia Schonborg Concrete Mixers 94 Patricia Hubbell

They’ve All Gone South 95 Mary Britton Miller Pigeons 95 Lilian Moore

Sing aSong of People 95 Lois Lenski Stickball 96

Virginia Schonborg

IHate Harry 104 Miriam Chaikin Puzzle 104

Arnold Spilka John, Tom, and James 104 Charles Henry Ross Double-Barreled

Ding-Dong-Bat 104 Dennis Lee

Clyde Watson Nina Payne Te n K i n d s 1 0 5

Mary Mapes Dodge T h e r e Wa s a L i t t l e G i r l 1 0 5

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Two People 105 E . V. R i e u

Read This with Gestures 105

John Ciardi Ta b l e M a n n e r s 1 0 6

Frank Asch

Zebra 93

Question 103 Anonymous

Tag Along 105

Claudia Lewis

Cockpit in the Clouds 99

The People Upstairs 93 Ogden Nash

Anonymous

Frightening 98

Umbilical 93

Elizabeth Madox Roberts

I L o v e Yo u 1 0 3

Yip-yap Rattletrap 105

That May Morning 93 Leland B. Jacobs

The People 93

William Jay Smith

City 98 Langston Hughes

The City Dump 98

Eve Merriam

Love 103

Children, Children Everywhere 101

Gelett Burgess Jack 106

Charles Henry Ross Bubble Gum 106

Hug O’War 102 Shel Silverstein

Advice to Small Children 102

Edward Anthony The Joke 102 Anonymous

Changing 102 Mary Ann Hoberman

Somebody 102 Anonymous ISaw aLittle Girl IHate 103

Arnold Spilka

Huckleberry, Gooseberry, Raspberry 103 Clyde Watson

Nina Payne D i d Yo u ? 1 0 6 William Cole

Why Run? 106

Norah Smaridge The Story of Augustus Who Would Not

Have Any Soup 107 Heinrich Hoffmann Eat-it-all Elaine 108

Kaye Starbird Tired Tim 109 Walter de la Mare

Wendy in Winter 109 Kaye Starbird

13

Tony Baloney 109 Dennis Lee

My Father Owns the Butcher Shop 118 Anonymous

Fernando 109 Marci Ridlon

Dorothy Aldis

Gertrude Stein

Leland B. Jacobs

Me

Stupid Old Myself 125 Russell Hoban

11 9

Karla Kuskin

Jessica Jane 110 May Justus

D o n ’ t Te l l M e T h a t I Ta l k

Every Time IClimb aTree 119

F o l l o w t h e L e a d e r 11 0 Kathleen Fraser

C h o c o l a t e 11 9 Nikki Giovanni

Dennis Lee

D r. S e u s s

Mark’s Fingers 120

N o G i r l s A l l o w e d 111

When IWas Lost 120

Mary O’Neill Dorothy Aldis

L i t t l e C l o t i l d a 111

Anonymous d o w n t h e Wa l k 111

Phyllis McGinley

Delmore Schwartz

e. e. Cummings

Just Me 120

Margaret Hillert

Winter Clothes 128

AWolf...

121

Yawning 128 Eleanor Farjeon

Dust of Snow 121

Kathleen Fraser

Robert Frost

M e a s l e s 11 3

Rhinos Purple,

Sulk 121 Felice Flolman

Kaye Starbird Barbershop 113

Hippos Green 129 Michael Patrick Hearn

If No One Ever

Martin Gardner

Marries Me 121

Wiggly Giggles 113 Stacy Jo Crossen and Natalie Anne Coveil

Since Hanna Moved Away 114 Judith Yiorst

Laurence Alma-Tadema

Broom Balancing 122

Margaret Hillert On the Skateboard

Lewis Carroll

Lillian Morrison

W h a t i n t h e W o r l d ? 11 4 Eve Merriam

ICan Fly 123 Felice Holman basketball 123

IAm!

11 7

Nikki Giovanni Basketball Star 123

My Name Is...

118

Pauline Clarke Me

11 8

Walter de la Mare

Karama Fufuka Song 124 Ruth Krauss

Growing Up 124 Harry Behn

One Day When We Went Walking 129 Va l i n e H o b b s

122

Kathleen Fraser

A L u l l a b y 11 4

Karla Kuskin

I’m Nobody! Who Are You? 128 Emily Dickinson

Bonnie Nims

Osage Indian

Wrestling 112

Me

I’m Really Not Lazy 127 Arnold Spilka

How to Get There 121

maggie and milly and molly and may 112

History 127 Myra Cohn Livingston IAm Cherry Alive 127

Keziah 120

Gwendolyn Brooks

We’re Racing, Racing

Surprises 126 Jean Conder Soule If We Didn’t Have Birthdays 126

Girls Can, Too! Ill Lee Bennett Hopkins

Jack Prelutsky

To o M u c h ! 1 2 6

Arnold Spilka

David McCord The Reason 1Like

Freddy 110

R. C. Scriven

Everybody Says 125

I A m R o s e 11 8

Queenie 109

The Marrog 125

122

H o m e ! Yo u ’ r e W h e r e I t ’s Wa r m Inside 131 The Wrong Start 132 Marchette Chute Mother ’s Nerves 132

X. J. Kennedy John 132 N. M. Bodecker

Waking 133 Lilian Moore Mother Doesn’t

Want aDog 133 Judith Viorst

u Amelia Mixed the Mustard 133 A.E.

Housman

IWish ICould Meet the Man That Knows 134

John Ciardi Some Things Don’t Make Any Sense at All 135

Judith Viorst T h e E i r s t To o t h 1 3 5

Charles and Mary Lamb Bringing Up Babies 135 Roy Fuller Six Weeks Old 135

Christopher Morley Help! 136 X. J. Kennedy

Homework 141 Russell Hoban Hot Line 141 Louella Dunann

I’m Alone in the Evening 142 Michael Rosen

The Winning of the TV West 142

John T. Alexander

The Middle of the Night 143 Karla Kuskin Our House 143

Dorothy Brown Thompson Two People 143 Eve Merriam

My Brother 136 Marci Ridlon Leave Me Alone 136 Felice Holman

The Myra Song 137 John Ciardi Let Others Share 137

Edward Anthony In the Motel 137

X. J. Kennedy Rules 137 Karla Kuskin

The Runaway 138 Bobbi Katz

Soap 138 Martin Gardner What Someone Said When He

Was Spanked on the Day Day Before His Birthday 139 John Ciardi

William Wise Little Bits of

Soft-Boiled Egg 149 Fay Maschler Chocolate, Chocolate 149

Arnold Adoff AThousand Hairy Savages 150

Spike Milligan IEat My Peas with Honey 150 Anonymous

Accidentally 150 M a x i n e W. K u m i n

IRaised aGreat Hullabaloo 150

Anonymous Tw i c k h a m Tw e e r 1 5 1

Jack Prelutsky

Lil’ Bro’ 136

Karama Fufuka

My Little Sister 149

Fm Hungry! My Mouth 146 Arnold Adoff This Is Just to Say 146 William Carlos Williams To m o r r o w ’ s t h e P a i r 1 4 6

Anonymous

Turtle Soup 146 Lewis Carroll

The Worm 151

Ralph Bergengren The Pizza 152

Ogden Nash

Soliloquy of aTortoise ...

251

E. V. Rieu M r. P r a t t 1 5 2

Myra Cohn Livingston Sneaky Bill 153 William Cole

Oodles of Noodles 147 Lucia M. and

James L. Hymes, Jr.

Mummy Slept Late and Daddy Pixed Breakfast 147

John Ciardi

Egg Thoughts 147 Russell Hoban Pie Problem 148 Shel Silverstein

Some People IKnow

155

Some People 156 Rachel Field

People 156 Charlotte Zolotow Routine 156 Arthur Guiterman

Meg’s Egg 148 Mary Ann Hoberman

Daddy Fell into the Pond 156

Celery 148 Ogden Nash

Smart 157

Going Up 140 John Travers Moore

Taste of Purple 148

Up in the Pine 140 Nancy Dingman Watson

Chocolate Cake 148

One Misty, Moisty Morning 157 Anonymous

They’re Calling 139 Felice Holman

Homework 141

Jane Yolen

Leland B. Jacobs Nina Payne Patience

149

Bobbi Katz

Alfred Noyes Shel Silverstein

Thoughts on Talkers 157 Walter R. Brooks

My Brother Bert 158

Ted Hughes

15

Grandpapa 159 Harry Graham

Solomon Grundy 165 Anonymous

The Owl and the Pussy-Cat 175

Growing Old 159

M r. K a r t o ff e l 1 6 5

The Hare and the Pig 176

Rose Henderson

Grandpa Dropped His Glasses 159

Leroy EJackson Manners 159 Mariana Griswold Van Rensselaer Unde

159

Harry Graham Miss Norma Jean Pugh 160 Mary O’Neill Godmother 161

Phyllis B. Morden Too Many Daves 161

Edward Lear

James Reeves

L. J. Bridgman

Aunt Sponge and

The Alligator 176

Mary Macdonald

AuntSpiker 166 Roald Dahl

The Lizard 176 Theodore Roethke

The Sugar Lady 166 Lrank Asch

The Serpent 176 Theodore Roethke

Lord Cray 167

The Shark 177

Edward Gorey

J.J.Bell

Together 167 Paul Engle

IHad aLittle Pig 177

The Opposite of Two 167 Richard Wilbur

The Ants at the Olympics 177

Richard Digance

Sir Smasham Uppe 167

The Animal Fair 178

E . V. R i e u

Dr. Seuss

Anonymous

The Pur pie Cow 178

The Little Boy and the Old Man 161 Shel Silverstein

Nonsense! Nonsense!

Gelett Burgess

IAsked My Mother 178

To m b s t o n e 1 6 2 Lucia M. and

James L. Hymes, Jr. Air Traveler 162 Lillian Morrison House. For Sale 162 Leonard Clark

Anonymous

Anonymous Algy Met aBear 178 Anonymous

Jabberwocky 170 Lewis Carroll

The Walrus 178

To o t ! To o t ! 1 7 0

Michael Plunders

Anonymous

Higglety, Pigglety, Pop!

170 Adventures of Isabel 179

Samuel Goodrich

Ogden Nash

On aBad Singer 162 Samuel Taylor Coleridge

On the Ning Nang Nong 171 Alligator Pie 180 Dennis Lee Spike Milligan The Common Cormorant 171 Beela by the Sea 180 Leroy P. Jackson Christopher Isherwood

Doctor Emmanuel 163

McIntosh Apple 171

Jittery Jim 162

William Jay Smith

James Reeves

Steven Kroll

Hog-Calling Competition 163 The Lobsters and the Morris Bishop

Old Quin Queeribus 163 Nancy Byrd Turner There Was an Old Man with aBeard 163 Edward Lear

Jonathan Bing 163 Beatrice Curtis Brown

Poor Old Lady 164 Anonymous

Fiddler Crab 171

Prederick J. Lorster The Butterfly’s Ball 172 William Roscoe

The Contrary Waiter 173

Edgar Parker Whoops! 173 Anonymous

Way Down South 173 Anonymous

Fatty, Fatty, Boom-a-latty 165 The Duel 174 Anonymous Eugene Pield

You Must Never Bath in an Irish Stew 180

Spike Milligan Did You Ever Go Fishing? 180 Anonymous

Sensitive, Seldom and Sad 181 Mervyn Peake Josephine 181 Alexander Resnikoff The Folk Who Live in B a c k w a r d To w n 1 8 1

Mary Ann Hoberman Father William 182

Lewis Carroll

16

Johnnie Crack and Flossie Snail 183

Dylan Thomas The Snail’s Dream 183

Oliver Herford T h e Tw i n s 1 8 3

Henry S. Leigh T h e N e w Ve s t m e n t s 1 8 4 Edward Lear

Pumberly Pott’s

Unpredictable Niece 186 Jack Prelutsky Don’t Worry if Your Job Is Small 186 Anonymous

Where Goblins

T h e P u f fi n 1 9 2 Robert Williams Wood

Dwel

Eletelephony 192

Some One 200

Laura E. Richards

Walter de la Mare

Mr. Bidery’s

Spidery Garden 192 David McCord

The Ptarmigan 193

Something Is There 200

Anonymous

Lilian Moore

Banananananananana 193 William Cole Clickbeetle 193

hist

Mary Ann Hoberman

Sing Me aSong of Teapots and Trumpets 193

Anonymous Herbert Glerbett 187

Jack Prelutsky

Green Gandies 201

George A. Strong

Eleanor Farjeon

Eve Merriam

Song of the Witches 202

To Be or Not To Be 194

William Shakespeare

Anonymous

Owl

Don’t Ever Seize a

Sylvia Read

Have You Ever Seen ? 1

9

5

Mary Ann Hoberman An Atrocious Pun 195

The Cow 190

Jack Prelutsky The Tutor 190

Carolyn Wells Weather 190

Anonymous Tw o W i t c h e s 1 9 0

Alexander Resnikoff Antonio 191 Laura E. Richards

Habits of the Hippopotamus 191 Arthur Guiterman TheBluffalo 191

Jane Yolen Moses 191

Anonymous

202

Weasel by the Tail 195 Wanted—A Witch’s Cat 202 Jack Prelutsky Shelagh McGee

Waiters 195

AFly and aFlea in aFlue 190 Anonymous

Humbert Wolfe The Witch! The Witch! 202

Anonymous

Alphabet Ste’w 188

What’s That? 201

Florence Parry Heide

N. M. Bodecker

Misnomer 194

AYoung Lady of Lynn 187

whist 201

e. e. Cummings

Te n d e r - h e a r t e d n e s s 1 8 6

Shel Silverstein

The Horseman 200 Walter de la Mare

The Modern Hiawatha 194

Jimmy Jet and His TV Set 187

Ghosts 200

Harry Behn

Number Nine, Penwiper Mews 186 Edward Gorey Harry Graham

198

Anonymous Wild Flowers 195 Peter Newell

Eight Witches 203 B.J.Lee Witches’ Menu 203

Sonja Nikolay Queen Nefertiti 203 Anonymous

Colonel Fazackerley 204 Charles Causley

J’s the Jumping Jay-Walker 196 Phyllis McGinley

Song of the Ogres 205

Poetry 196 Eleanor Farjeon

Three Ghostesses 205

Lumps 196 Judith Thurman AWord

196

Emily Dickinson T h e Ya k 1 9 7

Jack Prelutsky

Feelings About Words 197 Mary O’Neill

IV H. Auden

Anonymous

The Darkling Elves 205 Jack Prelutsky The Elf and

the Dormouse 206

Oliver Herford The Bogeyman 206 Jack Prelutsky The Troll 206

Jack Prelutsky

1 7

The Wendigo 207 Ogden Nash Father and Mother 207

X. J. Kennedy The Fairies 207

William Allingham The Great Auk’s Ghost 208

Ralph Hodgson The Pumpkin 208 Robert Graves

The Seven Ages of Elf-hood 208 Rachel Field Unicorn 209

William Jay Smith How to Tell Goblins from Elves 209 Monica Shannon The Little Man 209

Hughes Mearns Gumble 209

Michael Dugan Slithergadee 209 Shel Silverstein

The Bogus-Boo 210 James Reeves Wrimples 210

Jack Prelutsky Ms. Whatchamacallit

Thingamajig 211 Miriam Chaikin

The Spangled P a n d e m o n i u m 2 11 Palmer Brown The Creature in the Classroom 212

Jack Prelutsky Dinky 212 Theodore Roethke

The Plumpuppets 213

Christopher Morley Could It Have Been aShadow? 213 Monica Shannon

The Land of

AEootball Game 221

215

Potpourri

Alice Van Eck

Maps 221

Happy Thought 216 Robert Louis Stevenson

Our Washing Machine 216 Patricia Hubbell

Dorothy Brown Thompson If Once You Have

Slept on an Island 221 Rachel Field

Introduction to

Train Song 222

Songs of Innocence 216 William Blake

Diane Siebert Travel 223

No Holes Marred 216

Suzanne Douglass

Edna St. Vincent Millay Elight Plan 223 Jane Merchant

Steam Shovel 216 Charles Malam

To a n A v i a t o r 2 2 3

Daniel Whitehead Hicky Message from aMouse,

The Toaster 217

William Jay Smith

Ascending in

The Tin Prog 217

aRocket 224

Russell Hoban

Patricia Hubbell

Driving to the Beach 217 Joanna Cole

Robert Louis Stevenson

My Nose 217 Dorothy Aldis

T h e To a d 2 2 4

Prom: The Bed Book 217

Arithmetic 218

Frederick Winsor

Carl Sandburg

Dreams 225

What Is Pink? 218

Langston Hughes

Christina Rossetti

812

Mary O’Neill To Be Answered in Our Next Issue 219

Anonymous The Base Stealer 219 Robert Francis What Is Red? 219

Mary O’Neill Who’s In 219

Elizabeth Fleming

Roberts. Oliver

This Little Pig Built aSpaceship 225

Sylida Plath

What Is Orange ?

Prom aRailway Carriage 224

Par Trek 225

June Brady How Strange It Is 225 Claudia Lewis

The Paint Box 226 E. V. Rieu

Keep aPoem in Yo u r P o c k e t 2 2 6

Beatrice Schenk de Regniers To Dark Eyes Dreaming 226

Zilpha Keatley Snyder

The Library 220 Barbara A. Huff

Index of Titles ..

228

The Knockout 220

Index of First Lines

233

Lillian Morrison

Index of Authors .

240

Index of Subjects .

243

Poul Shot 220

Edwin A. Hoey Ye l l o w 2 2 0 David McCord

About the Authorllllustrator 247

18

I N T m O D U C T I O M

OR F’ VERY YOUNG CHILDREN, responding poetry to natural as as breathing. Even before they can speak, most babies delight inis the playful cadences of nursery rhymes and the soothing rhythms of lullabies. Eor the toddler. Mother Goose favorites are an integral part of life. Poetry is as delightful and surprising as being tickled or catching asnowflake on amitten. Young children are fascinated by the visual images of “The Old Woman Who Lived in aShoe.” They revel in the rhythms of “Peter, Peter, Pumpkin Eater.” And although they may not quite understand the meaning, they are enchanted by the wordplay of “Sing aSong of Sixpence.”

But then something happens to this early love affair with poetry. At some point during their school careers, many children seem to lose their interest and enthu¬ siasm for poetry and their easygoing pleasure in its sounds and images. They begin to find poetry boring and irrelevant, too difficult or too dull to bother with.

Eor the last few years I’ve been visiting schools, colleges, and libraries through¬ out the United States and Canada, working directly with children. In reading and reciting poetry to them. I’ve begun to understand the kinds of poems to which

children respond—poems that evoke laughter and delight, poems that cause a palpable ripple of surprise by the unexpected comparisons they make, poems that paint pictures with words that are as vivid as brushstrokes, poems that reawaken pleasure in the sounds and meanings of language. Repeated requests from teachers and librarians to recommend acomprehensive anthology of such poems provided the impetus for The Random House Book of Poetry for Children.

When Iassembled this collection, Idecided to focus on poems for elementary school children—the kids Iknow best. Ifelt that this group provided asufficiently wide age range, although there are undoubtedly many poems in the collection that will appeal to preschoolers and others that will please adolescents. There are, however, no nursery rhymes, which my target audience might find babyish; nor are there poems that specifically cater to such adolescent concerns as roman¬ tic love (and acne). Parents and teachers of preschoolers, therefore, should be selective in using the book. Apoem that might be deliciously scary for an eigbt-

year-old might be terrifying to afour-year-old. My criteria for selecting poems were rbythm, rbyme, and imagery that did not sacrifice clarity of meaning. I looked for poems that deal with topics of interest to children in away that delights the ear. Ihave avoided many of the “inspirational” and the long narrative poems that are so often included in other anthologies because they no longer

seem relevant to today’s children, morally uplifting though they may have been to earlier generations. On tbe other band, Ihave included such writers as Lewis

19

Carroll and A. A. Milne because their magic with words withstands the test of time. While most of the poets represented are primarily children’s poets, there are some poems by poets who are generally considered “adult” poets, such as Robert Frost, Christopher Morley, and John Updike. Sometimes these poets wrote an occasional poem for children; other times their poetry has abeautiful simplicity that makes it appealing and meaningful to both children and adults. Quite frankly, Itried to fill this book with poems Ibelieve elementary school children will like. While there are many poignant and serious poems in the collection, the accent is on humor and light verse.

During the last thirty or forty years there has been arenaissance in children’s poetry. Many of the best children’s poets who ever wrote are writing today. Such contemporary writers as Aileen Fisher, John Ciardi, Lilian Moore, Dennis Lee, and Shel Silverstein, to name ahandful, are creating children’s poetry that is relevant, understandable, and thoroughly enjoyable. Such poets, unlike some of their pedantic predecessors, do not set out to educate children in away that will make them more socially acceptable to adult company. They write from the child within themselves for “other” children, using the technical skills and insights of mature artists. Not unlike artists who create work for adults, they shape the way

reality is perceived. They enrich daily experience. Who can see afield of blazing sunflowers and not remember them as Van Gogh painted them? Try reading Lilian Moore’s “Until ISaw the Sea,” for example, before your next excursion to the beach. Then you, too, will see the sea breathe “in and out” when you watch the surf. After reading John Ciardi’s “Mummy Slept Late and Daddy Fixed Breakfast,” when some child receives awaffle that looks “like amanhole cover,”

the experience will have auniversality, aspecial element of humor, that it would not have had without the child’s experiencing the poem. Unlike the poems in many other “comprehensive” anthologies, two thirds of the poems in this collec¬ tion were first published during the past four decades. As the table of contents shows, Ihave divided the anthology into fourteen broad sections. In addition to the table of contents and the usual indexes of

author, title, and first line, Ihave included asubject index. Ihope that it will

prove valuable, especially to teachers, who can use it to add the fun and beauty of poetry to subjects in the school curriculum and to events during the year. Iam especially delighted that Arnold Lobel, aCaldecott Award winner, agreed to illustrate the collection. It is difficult to imagine achild looking at these illustrations and not wanting to read the poems! Ihope that our combined efforts will introduce children everywhere to many new, wonderful, and unexpected ways of looking at the world. Jack Prelutsky

Albuquerque, New Mexico April 1983

«v

WAT U I R E I Nature is the endless sky,

the sun of golden light, acloud that floats serenely by, the silver moon of night. Nature is asandy dune,

atall and stately tree, the waters of aclear lagoon, the billows on the sea.

Nature is agentle rain

and winds that howl and blow, athunderstorm, ahurricane, asilent field of snow. Nature is atranquil breeze and pebbles on ashore. Nature’s each and all of these and infinitely more.

!i

All Things Bright and Beautiful All things bright and beautiful, All creatures great and small, All things wise and wonderful. The Lord God made them all.

Each little flower that opens. Each little bird that sings.

He made their glowing colors. Auguries of Innocence To see aWorld in agrain of sand. And aHeaven in awild flower.

Hold Infinity in the palm of your hand. And Eternity in an hour. William Blake

He made their tiny wings.

The purple-headed mountain. The river running by. The sunset, and the morning.

That brightens up the sky; The cold wind in the winter. The pleasant summer sun.

The ripe fruits in the garden. He made them every one.

Fm Glad the Sky Is Painted Blue I’m glad the sky is painted blue. And the earth is painted green. With such alot of nice fresh air All sandwiched in between. Anonymous

The Universe

There is the moon, there is the sun

Round which we circle every year. And there are all the stars we see

On starry nights when skies are clear. And all the countless stars that lie

Beyond the reach of human eye. If every bud on every tree. All birds and fireflies and bees And all the flowers that bloom and die

Upon the earth were counted up. The number of the stars would be

Greater, they say, than all of these. Mary Britton Miller

He gave us eyes to see them. And lips that we might tell.

How great is God Almighty, Who has made all things well. Cecil Frances Alexander

On the Bridge If Icould see alittle fish-

That is what Ijust now wish! Iwant to see his great round eyes

Always open in surprise. Iwish awater-rat would glide Slowly to the other side;

Or adancing spider sit On the yellow flags abit. Ithink I’ll get some stones to throw, f

And watch the pretty circles show. Or shall we sail aflower-boat,

And watch it slowly—slowly float? Measurement

That’s nice-

Stars and atoms have no size.

They only vary in men’s eyes.

!because you never know How far away it means to go; And when tomorrow comes, you see.

It may be in the great wide sea.

Men and instruments will blunder

Calculating things of wonder.

Kate Greenaway

FUnt

Aseed is just as huge aworld As any ball the sun has hurled. Stars are quite as picayune As any splinter of the moon. Time is but avague device; Space can never be precise; Stars and atoms have agirth. Small as zero, ten times Earth.

There is, by God’s swift reckoning Auniverse in everything. A. M. Sullivan

An emerald is as green as grass, Aruby red as blood;

Asapphire shines as blue as heaven; Aflint lies in the mud.

Adiamond is abrilliant stone. To catch the world’s desire; An opal holds afiery spark; But aflint holds fire. Christina Rossetti

21,

The Secret Song Who saw the petals drop from the rose? I, said the spider, But nobody knows. Who saw the sunset flash on abird?

I, said the fish, But nobody heard.

Last Rites

Who saw the fog

Dead in the cold, asong-singing thrush. Dead at the foot of asnowberry bush—

come over the sea?

I, said the sea pigeon. Only me.

Weave him acoffin of rush.

Dig him agrave where the soft mosses grow,

Who saw the first

Raise him atombstone of snow.

green light of the sun? I, said the night owl.

Christina Rossetti

The only one. Who saw the moss

creep over the stone? I, said the gray fox, All alone. Margaret Wise Brown

The Wolf Cry The Arctic moon hangs overhead; The wide white silence lies below.

Astarveling pine stands lone and gaunt. Black-penciled on the snow. Weird as the moan of sobbing winds, Alone long call floats up from the trail;

Trees

And the naked soul of the frozen North

The Oak is called the king of trees.

Trembles in that wail.

The Aspen quivers in the breeze. Lew Sarett

%

The Poplar grows up straight and tall.

The Peach tree spreads along the wall, The Sycamore gives pleasant shade. The Willow droops in watery glade. The Fir tree useful timber gives. The Beech amid the forest lives. Sara Coleridge

The Crocus

The golden crocus reaches up To catch asunbeam in her cup. Wa l t e r C r a n e

Dandelion

B i r c h Tr e e s

The night is white. The moon is high. The birch trees lean

Against the sky. The cruel winds

Have blown away Each little leaf

Of silver gray. Olonely trees As white as wool ..,

That moonlight makes So beautiful. John Richard Moreland

The Ferns

High, high in the branches the seawinds plunge and roar. Astorm is moving westward, but here on the forest floor

the ferns have captured stillness. Agreen sea growth they are. The ferns lie underwater

in alight of the forest’s green. Their motion is like stillness, as if water shifts between

and agreat storm quivers through fathoms of green. Gene Baro

Olittle soldier with the golden helmet, What are you guarding on my lawn? You with your green gun And your yellow beard,

Why do you stand so stiff? There is only the grass to fight! Hilda Conkling

26

I

■ V

Wmd-Wolves

Do you hear the cry as the pack goes by,

The wind-wolves hunting across the sky? Hear them tongue it, keen and clear. Hot on the flanks of the flying deer! Across the forest, mere, and plain.

Mountain Wind Windrush down the timber chutes

between the mountain’s knees—

Their hunting howl goes up again! All night they’ll follow the ghostly trail, All night we’ll hear their phantom wail. For tonight the wind-wolf pack holds sway From Pegasus Square to the Milky Way, And the frightened bands of cloud-deer flee In scattered groups of two and three.

ahiss of distant breathing, ashouting in the trees, arecklessness of branches,

awilderness a-sway, when suddenly asilence

takes your breath away. Barbara Kunz Loots

William D. Sargent

The Wind

Ican get through adoorway without any key. And strip the leaves from the great oak tree. Ican drive storm-clouds and shake tall towers.

Or steal through agarden and not wake the flowers. Seas Ican move and ships Ican sink;

Ican carry ahouse-top or the scent of apink. When Iam angry Ican rave and riot; And when Iam spent, Ilie quiet as quiet. James Reeves

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Crowds

Crowds pushing

Into the subway Scare me.

(Maybe I’ll grow out of it.) Crowds rushing

At the traffic light Make me wonder. Crowds

Passing

Dashing Across the honking streets Carry me along. Crowds that stand In

Long Lines Forever

For aticket, For amovie,

Idon’t dig. Crowds

Slicking

Concrete Mixers

Up and down escalators. Crowds

The drivers are washing the concrete mixers;

Popping out of elevators

Like elephant tenders they hose them down. Tough gray-skinned monsters standing ponderous. Elephant-bellied and elephant-nosed. Standing in muck up to their wheel-caps. Like rows of elephants, tail to trunk. Their drivers perch on their backs like mahouts. Sending the sprays of water up.

Don’t turn me on.

(Maybe I’ll grow out of it.) Virginia Schonborg

They rid the trunk-like trough of concrete. Direct the spray to the bulging sides. Turn and start the monsters moving.

I

Concrete mixers #

.

:ca

1

3 .

Move like elephants Bellow like elephants Spray like elephants. Concrete mixers are urban elephants. Their trunks are raising acity. Patricia Hubbell

95

Sing aSong of People Sing asong of people Walking fast or slow; People in the city, Up and down they go. People on the sidewalk, People on the bus; People passing, passing. In back and front of us.

Pigeons

People on the subway Underneath the ground; People riding taxis

Pigeons are city folk c o n t e n t

Round and round and round.

to live with concrete

They seldom

People with their hats on. Going in the doors; People with umbrellas

try

When it rains and pours.

the sky.

People in tall buildings

Apigeon never sings

And in stores below; Riding elevators

and cement.

of hill

and flowering hedge,

Up and down they go.

but busily commutes

People walking singly. People in acrowd; People saying nothing. People talking loud. People laughing, smiling. Grumpy people too; People who just hurry

from sidewalk

to his ledge. Oh pigeon, what awaste of wings! Lilian Moore

They’ve All Gone South Redbird, bluebird. Bird with yellow mouth All the pretty little birds Have flown away south. But the little dusty sparrow

With his wings of rusty brown For some peculiar reason Lingers in the town And little city children Who wouldn’t know arobin From acuckoo or acrow

Will hear the little sparrows Chirping in the snow. Mary Britton Miller

And never look at you!

Sing asong of people Who like to come and go; Sing of city people You see but never know! Lois Lenski

96

Stickball The broomstick bat

Fog

Is good. You’ve got to be fast,

The fog comes

You’ve got to dodge. Stickball’s atough game

on little cat feet.

■J

It sits looking over harbor and city

In the city. The ball ricochets

on silent haunches

From fender to hood

and then moves on.

To stoop—you’ve got it! You’ve got to be fast, You’ve got to dodge In the city.

Carl Sandburg

' ' a s

Alley Cat School

li

Virginia Schonborg

Do alley cats go

to alley cat school? Where they learn how to slink and stay out of sight? Where they learn how to find

ASad Song About Greenwich Village

warm and comfortable places. On acold wintry night?

Do they learn from teachers and books, how to topple agarbage can lid?

She lives in agarret Up ahaunted stair. And even when she’s frightened

Did they all go to alley cat school?

There’s nobody to care.

Is that what they did?

She cooks so small adinner

Frank Asch

She dines on the smell.

And even if she’s hungry There’s nobody to tell.

She sweeps her musty lodging As the dawn steals near. And even when she’s crying

There’s nobody to hear. Ihaven’t seen my neighbor Since along time ago, And even if she’s dead

There’s nobody to know. Frances Park

Open Hydrant Water rushes up and gushes, cooling summer’s sizzle. In asudden whoosh

it rushes, not alittle drizzle. First ahush and down

it crashes, over curbs it swishes.

Just aluscious waterfall for

cooling city fishes. Marci Ridlon

97

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Rainy Nights Ilike the town on rainy nights When everything is wetWhen all the town has magic lights And streets of shining jet! When all the rain about the town

Is like alooking-glass,

And all the lights are upside-down Below me as Ipass.

In all the pools are velvet skies, And down the dazzling street

Afairy city gleams and lies In beauty at my feet. Irene Thompson

April Rain Song Let the rain kiss you. Let the rain beat upon your head with silver

City Lights Into the endless dark

liquid drops.

Let the rain sing you alullaby. The rain makes still pools on the sidewalk. The rain makes running pools in the gutter. The rain plays alittle sleep-song on our roof at night—

The lights of the buildings shine, Row upon twinkling row. Line upon glistening line. Up and up they mount Till the tallest seems to be

The topmost taper set

On atowering Christmas tree.

And Ilove the rain. Langston Hughes

Rachel Field

98

The City Dump

/:

City asleep City asleep Papers fly at the garbage heap. Refuse dumped and The sea gulls reap Grapefruit rinds And coffee grinds And apple peels. The sea gull reels and City

The field mouse steals In for abite

In the morning the city Spreads its wings Making asong In stone that sings.

At the end of night Of crusts and crumbs

blacker than the water

And pits of plums. The white eggshells And the green-blue smells And the gray gull’s cry And the red dawn sky.... City asleep City asleep

silent as aghostship

Acarnival

stealing by

On the garbage heap.

Frightening Here it comes!

In the evening the city Goes to bed

huge hulk

Hanging lights

in the darkness

About its head.

the long freighter

Langston Hughes

W h e r e A r e Yo u N o w ?

slowly

Felice Holman

down the dark river.

When the night begins to fall And the sky begins to glow You look up and see the tall City of light begin to grow— In rows and little golden squares The lights come out. First here, then there Behind the windowpanes as though

Claudia Lewis

Amillion billion bees had built

Their golden hives and honeycombs Above you in the air. Mary Britton Miller

id

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I m m t

M I I M I

a j r n j T m n U^IIIHIIII imiTJ.r'PO |Ll m n m m a

Foghorns The foghorns moaned in the bay last night so sad

so deep Ithought Iheard the city crying in its sleep. Lilian Moore

i H

D n n n

Qaaa. L g o Q Q

99

Cockpit in the Clouds Two thousand feet beneath our wheels

The city sprawls across the land Like heaps of children’s blocks outflung, In tantrums, by agiant hand. To east asilver spire soars

And seeks to pierce our lower wing. Above its grasp we drift along, Atiny, droning, shiny thing. The noon crowds pack the narrow streets. The el trains move so slow, so slow. Amidst their traffic, chaos, life.

The city’s busy millions go. Up here, aloof, we watch them crawl. In crystal air we seem to poise Behind our motor’s throaty roar— Down there, we’re just another noise. Dick Dorrance

-I i -

CMIILBMM, CHULBREM Children, children everywhere, children dark and children fair, children of all shapes and sizes, children springing odd surprises, children chasing, running races, children laughing, making faces, children cooking mud for dinner, children, every one awinner.

Children jumping, children wiggling, children grumping, children giggling, children singing, sneezing, weeping, children sometimes even sleeping, children giving children hugs, children chewing worms and bugs, children in their parents’ hair, children, children everywhere.

; I ,

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Karla Kuskin

120

Mark’s Fingers V'Ai ss

Ilike my fingers. They grip aball, Turn apage, Break afall. Help whistle Acall. Shake hands And shoot Rubber bands.

When candy is offered They take enough.

They fill my pockets With wonderful stuff. And they always tell me Smooth from rough. They follow rivers On amap. They double over When Irap. They smack together

Keziah

1have asecret place to go.

Not anyone may know. And sometimes when the wind is rough

When Iclap.

Icannot get there fast enough.

They button buttons. Tie shoelaces, Open doors to Brand-new places. They shape and float

And sometimes when my mother Is scolding my big brother. My secret place, it seems to me. Is quite tbe only place to be.

My paper ships.

Gwendolyn Brooks

Fasten papers to Paper clips. And carry ice cream To my lips....

Just Me

Mary O’Neill

Nobody sees what Ican see. For back of my eyes there is only me.

When IWas Lost

Underneath my belt My stomach was astone.

Sinking was the way Ifelt. A n d h o l l o w. And Alone. Dorothy Aldis

And nobody knows how my thoughts begin. For there’s only myself inside my skin. Isn’t it strange how everyone owns Just enough skin to cover his bones? My father’s would be too big to fit— I’d be all wrinkled inside of it.

And my baby brother’s is much too small— It just wouldn’t cover me up at all.

But Ifeel just right in the skin Iwear. And there’s nobody like me anywhere. Margaret Hillert

121

If No One Ever Marries Me If no one ever marries mi

And Idon’t see why they should; P R I PAY

For nurse says I’m not pretty,

And I’m seldom very good— If no one ever marries me

Ishan’t mind very much; Ishall huy asquirrel in acage,

mmi

Sulk

And alittle rahhit hutch. Iscuff

Ishall have acottage near awood. And apony all my own. And alittle lamh quite clean and tame

A’

That Ican take to town.

And when I’m getting really old. V!

At twenty-eight or nine,

^3 ■

f

Ishall buy alittle orphan girl And bring her up as mine.

m k

L a u r e n c e A l m a - Ta d e m a

my feet along And puff my lower lip Isip my milk in slurps A n d h u ff And frown

And stamp around And tip my chair back from the table

Nearly fall down but Idon’t care

How to Get There

Iscuff

And puff

Igo

through Sunday’s tunnel, hushed and deep; up Monday’s mountain, craggy and steep; along Tuesday’s trail, winding and slow; into Wednesday’s woods, still halfway to go; over Thursday’s bridge, shaky and tall; through the hidden gate in Friday’s wall

And frown And huff

And stamp And pout Till Iforget What it’s about Felice Holman

to get to S A T U R D A Y.

Dust of Snow

Iwish there were ashorter way. Bonnie Nims

The way acrow Shook down on me

AWolf...

The dust of snow From ahemlock tree

Awolf

Iconsidered myself but

the owls are hooting and

the night Ifear. Osage Indian

Fias given my heart Achange of mood.

And saved some part of aday Irued. Robert Frost

m

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Broom Balancing Millicent can play the flute and Francine can dance ajig, but Ican balance abroom. Susanna knows how to bake cookies and Harold can stand on one foot but Ican balance abroom.

Jeffry can climb aladder backwards and Andrew can count to five thousand and two, but Ican balance abroom.

Do you think acircus might discover me? Kathleen Fraser

The Sidewalk Racer About Feet

O R On the Skateboard

The centipede is not complete Unless he has one hundred feet.

Spiders must have eight for speed. And six is what all insects need.

Other creatures by the score Cannot do with less than four.

But two are quite enough, you know. To take me where Iwant to go. Margaret Hillert

Skimming an asphalt sea Iswerve, Icurve, I

sway; Ispeed to whirring sound an inch above the

ground; I’m the sailor and the sail. I’m the driver and the wheel

I’m the one and only single engine human auto

mobile. Lillian Morrison

123

Basketball Star

When Iget big Iwant to be the best

basketball player in the world. I’ll make jumpshots, hookballs and layups and talk about dribble—

mine’ll be outta sight! Karama Fufuka

basketball

when spanky goes

to the playground all the big boys say hey big time—what’s happenin’

’cause his big brother plays basketball for their high school and he gives them the power sign and says ICan Fly

you got it

but when igo and say Ican fly, of course, Very low. Not fast.

what’s the word

they just say

your nose is running junior

Rather slow.

Ispread my arms

Like wings. Lean on the wind.

And my body zings About.

one day i’ll be seven feet tall even if inever get abig brother and i’ll stuff that sweaty ball down their laughing throats Nikki Giovanni

Nothing showy— Afew loops And turns— But for the most

Part,

Ijust coast. However,

Since people are prone To talk about

It,

Igenerally prefer. Unless Iam alone. Just to walk about. Felice Holman

m

Song I’d much rather sit there in the sun

watching the snow drip from the trees and the milkman’s footsteps fill up with water

and the shadow of the spruce tree branches waving over the sparkle on the leftover snow and the water dripping in front of my eyes and the water dripping from the roof

from the bushes of sparkle the water is dripping the water is dripping from my eyes it is not dripping I’d much rather sit in the sun the sun I’d much rather sit in the sun

listening to the shovels scraping

and the birds that whistle on the wires that are dripping and the backporch is shining the steam is floating up

the steam floats up around me like my breathing was before and the maple tree is gleaming in the branches that are bare above the backporch that is steaming and Itake off my shoes Itake off my stockings and Isit in the sun Iam sitting in the sun I’d much rather sit here in the sun Ruth Krauss

Growing Up When Iwas seven

We went for apicnic Up to amagic Foresty place. Iknew there were tigers

Behind every boulder, Though Ididn’t meet one Face to face. When Iwas older

We went for apicnic Up to the very same Place as before, And all of the trees And the rocks were so little

They couldn’t hide tigers Or me anymore. Harry Behn

125

gT'

5 (

Stupid Old Myself

*

Stupid old myself today Found afour-leaf clover, Left it where it blew away, All my good luck’s over.

Done and finished, gone astray Stupid old myself today.

m

Stupid with abrand-new kite Lost it in atree

Way up high and tangled tight— No more kite for me.

Stupid falling off alog When Itried to get Close enough to catch afrog Came home very wet. Then Iswapped my teddy bear

In astupid muddle For adoll that’s lost her hair. No more bear to cuddle.

Walking slowly and alone Stupid and in sorrow Ijust found alucky stone— Maybe I’ll be smart tomorrow. With today one day behind me Maybe my good luck will find me. Russell Hoban

i

Everybody Says Everybody says Ilook just like my mother. Everybody says I’m the image of Aunt Bee. Everybody says My nose is like my father’s But /want to look like ME! Dorothy Aldis

The Marrog My desk’s at the back of the class And nobody, nobody knows I’m aMarrog from Mars With abody of brass

And seventeen fingers and toes. Wouldn’t they shriek if they knew I’ve three eyes at the back of my head And my hair is bright purple My nose is deep blue

And my teeth are half-yellow, half-red. My five arms are silver, and spiked With knives on them sharper than spears. Icould go back right now if 1liked— And return in amillion light-years. Icould gobble them all For I’m seven foot tall

And I’m breathing green flames from my ears. Wouldn’t they yell if they knew. If they guessed that aMarrog was here? Ha-ha, they haven’t aclu' Or wouldn’t they tremble with fear! “Look, look, aMarrog” They’d all scream—and SMACK

The blackboard would fall and the ceiling would crack And teacher would faint, Isuppose. But Igrin to myself, sitting right at the back

And nobody, nobody knows. R. C. Scriven

Surprises Surprises are round Or long and tallish. Surprises are square Or flat and smallish.

Surprises are wrapped With paper and how, And hidden in closets Where secrets won’t show.

Surprises are often D o n ’ t Te l l M e T h a t I Ta l k To o M u c h ! Don’t tell me that Italk too much!

Good things to eat; Aget-well toy or Abirthday treat.

Don’t say it! Don’t you dare!

Surprises come In such interesting sizes—

Ionly say important things Like why it’s raining where.

ILIKE SURPRISES!

Or when or how or why or what

Jean Conder Soule

Might happen here or there. And why athing is this or that

' A

And who is hound to care. So don’t tell me Italk too much!

DARE I

Don’t say it! DON’T

YOU

DARE!

Arnold Spilka

If We Didn’t Have Birthdays If we didn’t have birthdays, you wouldn’t be you. If you’d never been born, well then what would you do? If you’d never been born, well then what would you be? You might be afish! Or atoad in atree! You might be adoorknob! Or three baked potatoes! You might be abag full of hard green tomatoes.

Or worse than all that... Why, you might be aWASN’T! AWasn’t has no fun at all. No, he doesn’t. AWasn’t just isn’t. He just isn’t present.

But you ... You ARE YOU! And, now isn’t that pleasant! Dr. Seuss

127

History And I’m thinking how to get out Of this stuffy room With its big blackboards. And I’m trying not to listen In this boring room To the way things were. And I’m thinking about later, Running from the room Back into the world,

And what the guys will say when I’m up to bat and hit Abig fat home run. Myra Cohn Livingston

rm Really Not Lazy I’m really not lazy— I’m not! I’m not!

It’s just that I’m thinking And thinking And thinking Alot! It’s true Idon’t work But Ican’t!

Ijust can’t! When I’m thinking And thinking And thinking Alot! Arnold Spilka

IAm Cherry Alive “I am cherry alive,” the little girl sang, “Each morning Iam something new: Iam apple, Iam plum, Iam just as excited As the boys who made the Hallowe’en bang: Iam tree, Iam cat, Iam blossom too: When Ilike, if Ilike, Ican be someone new.

Someone very old, awitch in azoo: Ican be someone else whenever Ithink who. And Iwant to be everything sometimes too:

And the peach has apit and Iknow that too. And Iput it in along with everything To make the grown-ups laugh whenever Ising: And Ising: It is true; It is untrue; Iknow, Iknow, the true is untrue. The peach has apit, The pit has apeach: And both may be wrong When Ising my song.

But Idon’t tell the grown-ups: because it is sad. And Iwant them to laugh just like Ido Because they grew up And forgot what they knew And they are sure Iwill forget it some day too. They are wrong. They are wrong.

When Isang my song, Iknew, Iknew! Iam red, Iam gold, Iam green, Iam blue, Iwill always be me,

Iwill always be new!” Delmore Schwartz

128

Winter Clothes

Under my hood Ihave ahat And under that

My hair is flat.

Under my coat My sweater’s blue. My sweater’s red. I’m wearing two.

My muffler muffles to my chin And round my neck And then tucks in.

My gloves were knitted By my aunts. I’ve mittens too

And pants And pants And boots And shoes With socks inside.

The boots are rubber, red and wide.

I’m Nobody! Who Are You?

And when Iwalk Imust not fall

I’m nobody! Who are you? Are you nobody, too?

Because Ican’t get up at all. Karla Kuskin

Then there’s apair of us—don’t tell! They’d banish us, you know. How dreary to be somebody! How public, like afrog. To tell your name the livelong day To an admiring bog! Emily Dickinson

Yawning Sometimes—I’m sorry—but sometimes. Sometimes, yes, sometimes I’m bored. It may be because I’m an idiot; It may be because I’m floored;

It may be because it is raining. It may be because it is hot. It may be because Ihave eaten Too much, or because Ihave not.

But sometimes Icannot help yawning (I’m sorry!) the whole morning through— And when Teacher’s turning her back on us. It may be that she’s yawning too. Eleanor Farjeon

129

Rhinos Purple, Hippos Green My sister says Ishouldn’t color

Rhinos purple, Hippos green. She says

Ishouldn’t be so stupid; Those are things She’s never seen. But Idon’t care

What my sister says, Idon’t care

What my sister’s seen.

One Day When We Went Walking One day when we went walking, Ifound adragon’s tooth, Adreadful dragon’s tooth. “A locust thorn,” said Ruth.

Iwill color What Iwant to—

Rhinos purple. Hippos green. Michael Patrick Hearn

One day when we went walking, Ifound abrownie’s shoe, Abrownie’s button shoe.

“A dry pea pod,” said Sue.

One day when we went walking, Ifound amermaid’s fan,

Amerry mermaid’s fan. “A scallop shell,” said Dan. One day when we went walking, Ifound afairy’s dress,

Afairy’s flannel dress. “A mullein leaf,” said Bess.

Next time that Igo walking— Unless Imeet an elf,

Afunny, friendly elf— I’m going by myself! Valine Hobbs

I'

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1

Home! You are aspecial place;

you re where Iwake and wash my face, brush my teeth and comb my hair, change my socks and underwear, clean my ears and blow my nose, try on all my parents’ clothes. Home! You’re where it’s warm inside,

where my tears are gently dried, where I’m comforted and fed, where I’m forced to go to bed, where there’s always love to spare; Home! I’m glad that you are there.

'.V

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132

The Wrong Start Igot up this morning and meant to be good, But things didn’t happen the way that they should. Ilost my toothbrush, Islammed the door,

Idropped an egg On the kitchen floor,

//

Ispilled some sugar And after that

Itried to hurry And tripped on the cat. Things may get better. Idon’t know when. Ithink I’ll go back and start over again. Marchette Chute

John John could take his clothes off

but could not put them on. His patient mother dressed him,

and said to little John,

ii

“Now, John! You keep your things on. But John had long since gone— Mother ’s Nerves

and left atrail of sneakers

My mother said, “If just once more

Ihear you slam that old screen door. I’ll tear out my hair! I’ll dive in the stove! Igave it abang and in she dove. X. J. Kennedy

and small things in the sun, so she would know to find him

wherever he might run. And at the end of every trail stood Mrs. Jones &Son,

she with all his little clothes, and little John—with none! For John could take his clothes off

but could not put them on. His patient mother dressed him

and on went little John— and on— and on and onN. M. Bodecker

133

Mother Doesn’t Want aDog Mother doesn’t want adog. Mother says they smell, And never sit when you say sit,

Or even when you yell. And when you come home late at night And there is ice and snow.

You have to go back out because The dumb dog has to go. Mother doesn’t want adog. Mother says they shed. And always let the strangers in

Waking

And bark at friends instead.

My secret way of waking is like aplace

And do disgraceful things on rugs.

to hide.

And flop upon your bed at night

I’m very still, my eyes are shut. They all think Iam sleeping

And snore their doggy snore.

but

I’m wide awake inside.

And track mud on the floor.

Mother doesn’t want adog. She’s making amistake. Because, more than adog, Ithink She will not want this snake.

They all think Iam sleeping

Judith Viorst

but

I’m wiggling my toes. Ifeel sun-fingers

on my cheek. Ihear voices whisper-speak.

i

Isqueeze my eyes

to keep them shut so they will think I’m sleeping BUT

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.

1

I’m really wide awake inside —and no one knows!

Amelia Mixed the Mustard

Lilian Moore

Amelia mixed the mustard.

She mixed it good and thick; She put it in the custard And made her Mother sick.

And showing satisfaction By many aloud huzza “Observe,” said she, “the action Of mustard on Mamma.” A. E. Housman

m

IWish ICould Meet the Man That Knows Iwish Icould meet the man that knows

Who put the fly on my daddy’s nose When my daddy was taking anap today. Itried to slap that fly away So Daddy could sleep. But just as my hand Came down to slap him, the fly jumped, AND Ihit with abang—where do you suppose?— SMACK ON THE END OE DADDY’S NOSE!

Owl” cried Daddy, and up he jumped. He jumped so hard that he THUMP-

I

BUMPED

i

His head on the wall.

I

Well, Itried to say. 6 6

\

See, Daddy, Islapped the fly away.

5 9

And Ishould think he would have thanked me.

But what do you think he did? He S PA N K E D m e ! 6 6

Iwas just trying to help!” Isaid. But Daddy was looking very red. Eor trying to help, Ihave to thank you. But for that smack on the nose, Ell spank 6 6

you!

9 9

And up in the air went his great big hand As he said, “I hope you understand It’s my nose I’m spanking for, not the fly. For the fly Ithank you. 9 9

And that is why Iwish Icould meet the man that knows

Who put the fly on my daddy’s nose. For when Ifind him, Iwant to thank him.

And as Ido, Iwant to spank him. John Ciardi

135

Some Things Don’t Make Any Sense at All 4.

My mom says I’m her sugarplum. My mom says I’m her lamb. My mom says I’m completely perfect

#

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^

0

Just the way Iam.

My mom says I’m asuper-special wonderful terrific little guy.

My mom just had another baby.

«

!

M MMjiJmLi

Why?

a

Judith Viorst

Bringing Up Babies If babies could speak they’d tell mother or nurse

That slapping was pointless, and why; For if you’re not crying it prompts you to cry, And if you are—then you cry worse. Roy Fuller

T h e F i r s t To o t h

Through the house what busy joy. Just because the infant boy Has atiny tooth to show!

Ihave got adouble row. All as white, and all as small; Yet no one cares for mine at all.

He can say but half aword. Yet that single sound’s preferred To all the words that Ican say

In the longest summer day. He cannot walk, yet if he put With mimic motion out his foot. As if he thought he were advancing.

It’s prized more than my best dancing. Charles and Mary Lamb

Six Weeks Old

He is so small, he does not know The summer sun, the winter snow;

The spring that ebbs and comes again. All this is far beyond his ken. Alittle world he feels and sees:

His mother’s arms, his mother’s knees;

He hides his face against her breast. And does not care to learn the rest.

Christopher Morley

136

My Brother My brother’s worth about two cents, As far as Ican see.

Isimply cannot understand Why they would want a“he.” He spends agood part of his day Asleep inside the crib, And when he eats, he has to wear Astupid baby bib. He cannot walk and cannot talk And cannot throw aball.

Help! Firemen, firemen! State police!

Victor’s locked in Pop’s valise! Robert’s eating kitty litter! Doctor!

Latvyer!

In fact, he can’t do anything— He’s just no fun at all.

It would have been more sensible. As far as Ican see. Instead of getting one like him To get one just like me.

Baby-sitter!

Marci Ridlon

X.J. Kennedy

Lil’ Bro’

a

Ihave to take my little brother everywhere Igo

d m /X.

’cause I’m his big sister and Mama told me to.

His nose is always snotty and his shoes come all untied,

his diapers get wet and dirty, and he sure does like to cry.

Leave Me Alone

Loving care! Too much to bear. Leave me alone!

He gets in the dirt and runs in the street and doesn’t like to mind—

Don’t brush my hair. Don’t pat my head.

but he’s my little brother

Don’t tuck me in

and Ikeep him all the time.

Tonight in bed. Don’t ask me if Iwant asweet. Don’t fix my favorite things to eat. Don’t give me lots of good advice. And most of all just don’t be nice.

Karama Fufuka

But when I’ve wallowed well in sorrow. Be nice to me again tomorrow. Felice Holman

137

The Myra Song

In the Motel

Myra, Myra, sing-song. Myra, Myra, gay.

Bouncing! bouncing! on the beds My brother Bob and Icracked heads—

Myra, Myra, skip-along Sings all day.

People next door heard the crack,

Myra, Myra, gloom-pout.

Myra, Myra, sad. Myra, Myra, poke-about. Don’t feel bad.

Whammed on the wall, so we whammed right back. Dad’s razor caused an overload

And wow! did the TV set explode! Someone’s car backed fast and—tinkle!

Myra, Myra, chatterbox. Myra, Myra, busy. What aclatter Myra talks! Makes me dizzy!

Myra, Myra, la-de-da. Dressed in Mummy’s clothes. Playing Lady Fa-la-la, Looking down her nose.

In our windshield was awrinkle.

Eight more days on the road? Hooray! What abang-up holiday! X.J. Kennedy Rules

Do not jump on ancient uncles.

Myra, Myra, sleepyhead. Myra, Myra, tiny.

Do not yell at average mice.

Myra, Myra, slugabed. The nose Ikiss is shiny.

Do not wear abroom to breakfast.

Gay-sad-twinkle-star

Big-Myra-small.

Do not ask asnake’s advice.

What alot of her there are! Ilove them all.

Do not bathe in chocolate pudding. John Ciardi Do not talk to bearded bears.

Let Others Share

Let others share your toys, my son.

Do not smoke cigars on sofas.

Do not insist on all the fun.

For if you do it’s certain that You’ll grow to be an adult brat. Edward Anthony

Do not dance on velvet chairs.

Do not take awhale to visit

Russell’s mother’s cousin’s yacht.

And whatever else you do do It is better you Do not. Karla Kuskin

138

The Runaway Imade peanut butter sandwiches. Ididn’t leave amess.

Ipacked my shell collection and my velvet party dress, the locket Grandma gave me and two pairs of extra socks, my brother’s boy scout flashlight and some magic wishing rocks. Oh, they’ll be so sorry.

Oh, they’ll be so sad, when they start to realize

what anifty kid they had. I’d really like to be here

when they wring their hands and say, “We drove the poor child to it. She finally ran away.”

If Ipeeked through the window I’d see them dressed in black, and hear them sob and softly sigh, “Come back, dear child! Come back! The house will he so quiet. My room will be so clean. And they’ll be oh so sorry

Soap Just look at those hands!

that they were oh so mean! Bobbi Katz

Did you actually think That the dirt would come off, my daughter. By wiggling your fingers Around in the sink

And slapping the top of the water? Just look at your face! Did you really suppose Those smudges would all disappear With adab at your chin And the tip of your nose And arub on the back of one ear?

You tell me your face

And your fingers are clean'^ Do you think your old Dad is adope? Let’s try it again W i t h a d i ff e r e n t r o u t i n e .

This time we’ll make use of the soap! Martin Gardner

139

They’re Calling

What Someone

They’re calling, “Nan,

Said When He Was Spanked on the Day Before His Birthday

Come at once.” But Idon’t answer.

It’s not that Idon’t hear.

I’m very sharp of ear. But I’m not Nan, I’m adancer.

Some day Imay

Pack my bag and run away.

They’re calling, “Nan, Go and wash.”

But Idon’t go yet. Their voices are quite clear.

I’m humming but Ihear.

Some day Imay. —But not today. Some night Imight

But I’m not Nan,

Slip away in the moonlight.

I’m apoet.

Imight.

They’re calling, “Nan, Come to dinner!”

And Istop humming. Iseem to hear them clearer. Now that dinner’s nearer.

Well, just for now I’m Nan, And Isay, “Coming.” Felice Holman

Some night. —But not tonight. Some night. Some day. Imight. Imay.

—But right now Ithink I’ll stay. John Ciardi

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Up in the Pine

1

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I’m by myself

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Iwant to be

'

Idon’t want anyone Playing with me

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Daddy spanked me And Idon’t feel fine

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Ican look way out » h 4

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In the top of the pine

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I’m all alone

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12

a fi p i S V 1.J

Going Up

On the woods and lakes

m

Ican hear the buzz iA.

t

That the chain saw makes

And awoodpecker chopping In the crabapple tree With his red crest bobbing But he doesn’t see me

Head in glass,

If anybody hollers I’ll pretend I’m not there

Watches all

Imay miss dinner

The Martians pass.

But Idon’t care

Ray gun ready.

The pine needles swish

Tank in tow. Rocket waiting— Systems go!

And the wind whistles free

Whish! by moon.

It’s starting to rain

Over stars.

But the tree keeps me dry

Past the glint

We toss in the black clouds

Of alien cars,

The tree and I

Space-Suit Sammy

Now Daddy’s calling.

At the helm

He never stays mad.

Knows atomic

He probably feels awful

Void and realm.

Because I’m sad.

Knows the course.

I’ll answer Daddy.

The way ahead.

He’s concerned about the weather.

Up and up—

I’ll climh down and he’ll take my hand And we’ll go in the house together.

Space-Suit Sammy,

And up in the pine Is only me

And so to bed. John Travers Moore

I

Nancy Dingman Watson

m Homework

Homework sits on top of Sunday, squashing Sunday flat. Homework has the smell of Monday, homework’s very fat. Heavy books and piles of paper, answers Idon’t know. Sunday evening’s almost finished, now I’m going to go

Do my homework in the kitchen. Maybe just asnack. Then I’ll sit right down and start as soon as Irun back For some chocolate sandwich cookies. Then I’ll really do All that homework in aminute. First I’ll see what new

Show they’ve got on television in the living room.

Everybody’s laughing there, but misery and gloom And afull refrigerator are where Iam at.

Hot Line

I’ll just have another sandwich. Homework’s very fat. Russell Hoban

Our daughter, Alicia, Had just turned sixteen. And was earning the title

Of “Telephone Queen.” For her birthday we gave her Her own private phone Along with instructions To leave ours alone.

Homework What is it about homework That makes me want to write

My Great Aunt Myrt to thank her for The sweater that’s too tight?

Now we still catch her using Our line, with the stall, “I can’t tie mine up. Mom, Imight get acall.” Louella Dunann

What is it about homework

That makes me pick up socks That stink from days and days of wear. Then clean the litter box?

What is it about homework That makes me volunteer

To take the garbage out before The bugs and flies appear? What is it about homework

That makes me wash my hair And take an hour combing out

The snags and tangles there? What is it about homework?

You know, Iwish Iknew,

’Cause nights when I’ve got homework I’ve got much too much to do! ]ane Yolen

U 2

I’m Alone in the Evening I’m alone in the evening when the family sits reading and sleeping and Iwatch the fire in close

,

to see flame gohlins wriggling out of their caves for the evening Later I’m alone

when the hath has gone cold around me and Ihave put my foot beneath the cold tap where it can dribble

through valleys between my toes out across the white plain of my foot and bibble bibble into the s

e a

I’m alone

The Winning of the TV West When twilight comes to Prairie Street On every TV channel,

The kids watch men with blazing guns In jeans and checkered flannel.

Partner, the West is wild tonight— There’s going to be abattle

Between the sheriff’s posse and The gang that stole the cattle. On every screen on Prairie Street The sheriff roars his order:

“We’ve got to head those hombres off Before they reach the border.”

Clippity-clop and bangity-bang The lead flies left and right. Paradise Valley is freed again Until tomorrow night. And all the kids on Prairie Street Over and under ten

Can safely go to dinner now ... The West is won again. John TAlexander

when mum’s switched out the light my head against the pillow listening to ca thump ca thump in the middle of my ears. It’s my heart. Michael Rosen

U 3

Two People She reads the paper, while he turns on TV; she likes the mountains, he craves the sea.

The Middle of the Night

He’d rather drive, she’ll take the plane; he waits for sunshine; she walks in the rain.

This is asong to be sung at night When nothing is left of you and the light When the cats don’t bark And the mice don’t moo

And the nightmares come and nuzzle you When there’s blackness in the cupboards And the closet and the hall

He gulps down cold drinks, she sips at hot; he asks, “Why go?” She asks, “Why not?”

In just about everything they disagree,

And atipping, tapping, rapping In the middle of the wall

but they love one another and they both love me.

When the lights have one by one gone out All over everywhere And ashadow by the curtains Bumps ashadow by the chair Then you hide beneath your pillow With your eyes shut very tight And you sing

“There’s nothing sweeter than The middle of the night.

I’m extremely fond of shadows And Ireally must confess

Eve Merriam

Our House Our house is small— The lawn and all

Can scarcely hold the flowers. Yet every bit. The whole of it.

That cats and bats don’t scare me.

Is precious, for it’s ours!

Well, they couldn’t scare me less And most of all Ilike the things

From door to door, From roof to floor.

That slide and slip and creep.”

From wall to wall we love it;

It really is surprising

We wouldn’t change For something strange One shabby corner of it!

How fast you fall asleep. Karla Kuskin

The space complete In cubic feet From cellar floor to rafter

Just measures right. And not too tight, For us, and friends, and laughter! Dorothy Brown Thompson

1f I?

Fm hungry, so Ithink I’ll take abite or two of lunch, apizza and achocolate cake. some peanut butter crunch. ahealthy slice of apple pie.

t

apound or so of ham. astack of waffles (two feet high)

!A

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with boysenberry jam.

4

I’ll follow with adozen eggs A

t

(I’ll scramble them, Iguess) and six or seven turkey legs (I could not do with less).

I 1

some rhino roast and hippo stew and fresh fillet of horse.

i

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then rest aminute (maybe two) and start the second course.

A; ■m.

U 6

My Mouth stays shut but

food just fi n d s away

my tongue says we

are

Turtle Soup

full today but

teeth just grin and say come

in

iam always hungry Arnold Adoff

Beautiful Soup, so rich and green, Waiting in ahot tureen !

Who for such dainties would not stoop ? Soup of the evening, beautiful Soup ! Soup of the evening, beautiful Soup ! Beau—ootiful Soo—oop ! Beau—ootiful Soo—oop ! Soo—oop of the e—e—evening. Beautiful, beautiful Soup ! Beautiful Soup !Who cares for fish.

This Is Just to Say Ihave eaten

the plums

Game, or any other dish ?

Who would not give all else for two pennyworth only of beautiful Soup ?

the icebox

Pennyworth only of beautiful Soup? Beau—ootiful Soo—oop ! Beau—ootiful Soo—oop !

and which

Soo—oop of the e—e—evening.

that were in

you were probably

Beautiful, beauti—FUL SOUP ! Lewis Carroll

saving for breakfast

To m o r r o w ’ s t h e F a i r

Forgive me

they were delicious so

sweet

and so cold. William Carlos Williams

Tomorrow’s the fair. And Ishall be there.

Stuffing my guts With gingerbread nuts. Anonymous

1U7

Egg Thoughts

Mummy Slept Late and Daddy Fixed Breakfast

Soft-Boiled

Daddy fixed the breakfast.

Ido not like the way you slide, Ido not like your soft inside, Ido not like you many ways. And Icould do for many days

He made us each awaffle.

It looked like gravel pudding. It tasted something awful.

Without asoft-boiled egg.

Ha, ha,” he said, “I’ll try again. 9 5

This time I’ll get it right. But what Igot was in between

Sunny-Side-Up With their yolks and whites all runny They are looking at me funny.

Bituminous and anthracite.

Alittle too well done? Oh well.

Sun ny-Side-D own

I’ll have to start all over.

Lying face-down on the plate

9 9

That time what landed on my plate

On their stomachs there they wait.

Looked like amanhole cover.

Poached

Itried to cut it with afork:

Poached eggs on toast, why do you shiver With such afunny little quiver?

The fork gave off aspark. Itried aknife and twisted it

Into aquestion mark.

Scrambled

Ieat as well as Iam able.

Itried it with ahack-saw.

But some falls underneath the table.

Itried it with atorch. It didn’t even make adent.

Hard-Boiled

It didn’t even scorch.

With so much suffering today

The next time Dad gets breakfast

Why do them any other way?

When Mommy’s sleeping late,

Russell Hoban

Ithink I’ll skip the waffles. I’d sooner eat the plate!

4:

]ohn Ciardi

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Oodles of Noodles

m

Ilove noodles. Give me oodles.

Make amound up to the sun. Noodles are my favorite foodies. Ieat noodles by the ton.

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In their hunches,

Ready for September lunches. Gather them, no Minutes wasting. Purple is

Delicious tasting. Leland B. Jacobs

Meg’s Egg

Pie Problem

Meg

If Ieat one more piece of pie. I’ll die! If Ican’t have one more piece of pie. I’ll die!

Likes

Aregular egg Not apoached

So since it’s all decided Imust die,

Or afried

MMMM—OOOH—MY!

But aregular egg

Chomp—Gulp—’Bye.

Imight as well have one more piece of pie.

Not adeviled

Shel Silverstein

Or coddled Or scrambled

Chocolate Cake

Or boiled

But an eggular Megular Regular Egg! Mary Ann Hoberman

Celery

Chocolate cake

Celery, raw. Develops the jaw. But celery, stewed.

chocolate cake

Is more quietly chewed.

Flour soda

Ogden Nash

that’s the one

I’ll help you make salt are sifted

butter sugar cocoa lifted

by the eggs then mix the whole

grease the pans I’ll lick the bowl Chocolate caked chocolate caked that’s what I’ll be when it’s baked. Nina Payne

U 9 Chocolate Chocolate

Little Bits of Soft-Boiled Egg Little bits of soft-boiled egg

Spread along the table leg

1

love

Annoy aparent even more

Than toast and jam dropped on the floor. (When you’re bashing on the ketchup Keep in mind where it might fetch up.) Try to keep the food you eat Off your clothes and off your seat, On your plate and fork and knife. This holds true throughout your life.

you so 1

w a n t t o

marry you

and live

¥ay Maschler

forever in the fl a v o r

of your brown Arnold Adoff

My Littie Sister My little sister Likes to eat.

Patience

But when she does She’s not too neat.

Chocolate Easter bunny In ajelly bean nest, I’m saving you for very last

Because Ilove you best. I’ll only take anibble Erom the tip of your ear And one bite from the other side

So that you won’t look queer. Yum, you’re so delicious! Ididn’t mean to eat

Your chocolate tail till Tuesday. Oops! There go your feet! Iwonder how your back tastes With all that chocolate hair.

Inever thought your tummy Was only filled with air! Chocolate Easter bunny In ajelly bean nest. I’m saving you for very last Because Ilove you best. Bobbi Katz

The trouble is She doesn’t know

Exactly where The food should go! William Wise

150

Accidentally Once—I didn’t mean to, but that was that—

Iyawned in the sunshine

and swallowed agnat. I’d rather eat mushrooms

and bullfrogs’ legs, I’d rather have pepper all over my eggs

J;/.

than open my mouth on asleepy day and close on agnat going down that way. It tasted sort of salty. It didn’t hurt abit.

AThousand Hairy Savages

Iaccidentally ate agnat

Athousand hairy savages Sitting down to lunch Gobble gobble glup glup

w

and that a

s

it! M a x i n e W. K u m i n

Munch munch munch. Spike Milligan

IEat My Peas with Honey Ieat my peas with honey; I’ve done it all my life. It makes the peas taste funny. But it keeps them on the knife. Anonymous

IRaised aGreat Hullabaloo

Iraised agreat hullabaloo When Ifound alarge mouse in my stew. Said the waiter, “Don’t shout And wave it about.

Or the rest will be wanting one, too!” Anonymous

151

The Worm

When the earth is turned in spring The worms are fat as anything. And birds come flying all around To eat the worms right off the ground. They like worms just as much as I

Like bread and milk and apple pie. And once, when Iwas very young, Iput aworm right on my tongue. Ididn’t like the taste abit.

Tw i c k h a m Tw e e r

And so Ididn’t swallow it. Shed atear for Twickham Tweer

who ate uncommon meals,

who often peeled bananas and then only ate the peels, who emptied jars of marmalade and only ate the jars, and only ate the wrappers

off of chocolate candy bars. W h e n Tw i c k h a m c o o k e d a c h i c k e n

he would only eat the bones, he discarded scoops of ice cream though he always ate the cones, he’d boil asmall potato but he’d only eat the skin,

and pass up canned asparagus to gobble down the tin. He sometimes dined on apple cores

and bags of peanut shells, on cottage cheese containers,

cellophane from caramels, but Twickham Tweer passed on last year, that odd and novel man,

when he fried an egg one morning and then ate the frying pan. jack Prelutsky

But oh, it makes my Mother squirm Because she thinks Iate that worm!

Ralph Bergengren

152 #'1

Soliloquy of aTortoise on Revisiting the Lettuce Beds

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Sleeping in aClump of Blue Hollyhocks One cannot have enough of this delicious stuff! E . V. R i e u

The Pizza

Look at itsy-bitsy Mitzi!

See her figure slim and ritzy! She eatsa Pizza!

Greedy Mitzi!

She no longer itsy-bitsy! Ogden Nash

M r. P r a t t Mr. Pratt has never left

Asingle crumb of bread,

Which may explain why Mrs. Pratt Looks lean and underfed. Ionce asked Mr. Pratt to leave His wife acrumb of bread.

Do you suggest,” he shrieked at me. i i .

That Ibe thin instead?

? 9

Ionly thought,” Ianswered true. (

(

That were you not so fat.

There might be room for me to see Aglimpse of Mrs. Pratt. 5 5

Myra Cohn Livingston

153

Sneaky Bill I’m Sneaky Bill, I’m terrible mean and vicious, Isteal all the cashews

from the mixed-nuts dishes;

Ieat all the icing but Iwon’t touch the cake. And what you won’t give me.

I’ll go ahead and take. Igobble up the cherries from everyone’s drinks. And whenever there are sausages

Igrab adozen links; Itake both drumsticks if

there’s turkey or chicken. And the biggest strawberries

are what I’m pickin’; Imake sure Iget the finest chop on the plate. And I’ll eat the portions of anyone who’s late! I’m always on the spot before the dinner bell— Iguess I’m pretty awful. but I

do e a t

well! William Cole

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Train Song Out in back railroad track

clickety-clack

clickety-clack great trains

freight trains

talk about your late trains the 509

right on time

straight through to L.A. whistle blows

there she goes slicing through the day.

going-to-North Platte cars grain trains Maine trains

going-through-the-rain trains long trains strong trains

singing-clickety-song trains cars with lumber

Trains with faces in arow

cars with cattle

going places: Buffalo New York City, Boston, Mass,

clickety-clacking

slowing ’neath the underpass

Detroit to Chicago departing at five whenever we get there

engineers with striped hats head-of-the-line aristocrats

up in front, sitting high,

to Seattle.

is when we arrive.

on their way

Midnight special to Cheyenne get asleeper if you can ALL ABOARD! say good-bye

boxcars

hear the railroad lullaby.

wave at me as they go by Southern Route Sante Fe

Cotton Belt

flatcars

Diane Siebert

Flight Plan Of all the ways of traveling in earth and air and sea It’s the lively helicopter that has captivated me. It hovers anywhere in air just like ahummingbird. Flies backward; forward, up or down, whichever is preferred. It doesn’t pierce the stratosphere as zipping rockets do

Nor pop sound barriers and puff fat jet streams through the blue. It isn’t first in speed or weight or anything but fun And deftly doing dangerous jobs that often must be done. When anyone is lost in storm or flooded river’s span And other planes can’t help at all, ahelicopter can. It lights on snow or mountaintop—wherever it is needed. The plane that’s like ahummingbird will not be superseded By satellite or Stratojet. No supership has topped her. And just as soon as ever Ican I’ll fly ahelicopter! jane Merchant

To a n Av i a t o r

You who have grown so intimate with stars And know their silver dripping from your wings. Swept with the breaking day across the sky. Known kinship with each meteor that swings— You who have touched the rainbow’s fragile gold.

Carved lyric ways through dawn and dusk and rain And soared to heights our hearts have only dreamed— How can you walk earth’s common ways again? Daniel Whitehead Hicky

Travel

The railroad track is miles away.

And the day is loud with voices speaking. Yet there isn’t atrain goes by all day But Ihear its whistles shrieking.

All night there isn’t atrain goes by. Though the night is still for sleep and dreaming But Isee its cinders red on the sky And hear its engine steaming.

My heart is warm with the friends Imake. And better friends I’ll not be knowing. Yet there isn’t atrain Iwouldn’t take. No matter where it’s going. Edna St. Vincent Millay

From aRailway Carriage Faster than fairies, faster than witches,

Bridges and houses, hedges and ditches; And charging along like troops in abattle. All through the meadows the horses and cattle: All of the sights of the hill and the plain Fly as thick as driving rain;

And ever again, in the wink of an eye. Message from aMouse, Ascending in aRocket

Painted stations whistle by.

Attention, architect! Attention, engineer! Amessage from mouse. Coming clear:

All by himself and gathering brambles; Here is atramp who stands and gazes; And there is the green for stringing the daisies!

“Suggest installing

Here is achild who clambers and scrambles.

Here is acart run away in the road Lumping along with man and load; And here is amill and there is ariver:

Spike or sprocket Easily turned by

Each aglimpse and gone for ever!

Amouse in arocket; An ejection gadget Simple to handle

To free mouse quickly From this space-age ramble. Suggest packing

For the next moon trip Amouse-sized parachute

Somewhere in the ship. So Ican descend

Robert Louis Stevenson

T h e To a d

In days of old, those far off times

Of high romance and magic, Atoad was an enchanted prince, Atransformation tragic. Today the toad is studied as

(When my fear comes strong) Back to earth where Iwas born. Back to the cheerful world of cheese

And small mice playing. And my wife waiting.” Patricia Hubbell

Ascientific topic— No prince is found, although we look With vision microscopic. And yet, the prince is there—he’s there As clearly as can be. Forget your microscope, my friend. And use your mind to see! Robert S. Oliver

This Little Pig Built aSpaceship This little pig built aspaceship, This little pig paid the bill;

This little pig made isotopes, This little pig ate apill;

And this little pig did nothing at all. But he’s just alittle pig still.

How Strange It Is

Frederick Winsor

In the sky Soft clouds are blowing by. Nothing more can Isee Dreams

In the blue air over me.

Hold fast to dreams For if dreams die

Life is abroken-winged bird That cannot fly. Hold fast to dreams

For when dreams go Life is abarren field Frozen with snow. Langston Hughes

Yet Iknow that planetoids and rocket cones, Telstars studded with blue stones. And many hundred bits of fins And other man-made odds and ends

Are wheeling round me out in space At abreathless astronautic pace. How strange it is to know That while Iwatch the soft clouds blow

So many things Icannot see Are passing by right over me. Claudia Lewis

Far Trek

Some things will never change although We tour out to the stars; Arriving on the moon we’ll find Our luggage sent to Mars! June Brady

226

To Dark Eyes Dreaming Dreams go fast and far these days. They go by rocket thrust. They go arrayed

in lights or in the dust of stars.

Dreams, these days,

go fast and far. The Paint Box

“Cobalt and umber and ultramarine.

Ivory black and emerald green— What shall Ipaint to give pleasure to you?” “Paint for me somebody utterly new.” “I have painted you tigers in crimson and white.” “The colors were good and you painted aright.” “I have painted the cook and acamel in blue

And apanther in purple.” “You painted them true.

Dreams are young, these days, or very old. They can be black or blue or gold.

They need no special charts, nor any fuel. It seems, only one rule applies, to all our dreams—

They will not fly except in open sky. Afenced-in dream will die. Zilpha Keatley Snyder

“Now mix me acolor that nobody knows.

And paint me acountry where nobody goes. And put in it people alittle like you. Watching aunicorn drinking the dew.

Keep aPoem in Your Pocket Keep apoem in your pocket

and apicture in your head and you’ll never feel lonely at night when you’re in bed.

The little poem will sing to you the little picture bring to you adozen dreams to dance to you at night when you’re in bed. ¥

S&

Keep apicture in your pocket and apoem in your head

and you’ll never feel lonely at night when you’re in bed. Beatrice Schenk de Regniers

'7^

r, INDEX OF TITLES !:

7i

About Feet, 122

Accidentally, 150 Adventures of Isabel, 179 Advice to Small Children, 102 Air Traveler, 162 Algy Met aBear, 178

All Things Bright and Beautiful, 22

Alley Cat School, 96 Alligator, The, 176

Alligator Pie, 180 Alphabet Stew, 188 Amelia Mixed the Mustard, 133

Bug in aJug, 74 Bug Sat in aSilver Flower, A, 73

Butterfly’s Ball, The, 172

Could It Have Been aShadow?

Camel, 57

213

Camel’s Complaint, The, 57 Canary, The, 83 Cat, 68 Cat in Despondency, A, 67 Cat of Cats, The, 67 Caterpillar, 76 Cats, 68 Cat’s Menu, 69

Animal Fair, The, 178 Antonio, 191

Cats of Kilkenny, The, 67

Ants, Although Admirable, Are Awfully Aggravating, 74 Ants at the Olympics, The, 177 April Rain Song, 97

Changing, 102

Arithmetic, 218 Atrocious Pun, An, 195 Auguries of Innocence, 22 August, 45

Aunt Sponge and Aunt Spiker, 166 Baby Talk, 82 Banananananananana, 193

Barbershop, 113 Base Stealer, The, 219 basketball, 123 Basketball Star, 123 Bat, The, 56 Bat, The, 56 Beela by the Sea, 180

Country Barnyard, 68 Cow, The, 64 Cow, The, 190 Creature in the Classroom, The, 2 1 2

Crickets, 73 Crocodile, The, 81 Crocus, The, 25 Crowds, 94

Celery, 148 Daddy Fell into the Pond, 156 Dandelion, 25

Check, 32

Children, Children Everywhere, 101

Darkling Elves, The, 205 Daylight Saving Time, 41

Children’s Carol, The, 48

Desert Tortoise, 80

Chipmunk’s Song, The, 55

D i d Yo u ? 1 0 6

Chocolate Cake, 148 Chocolate, Chocolate, 149 City, 98 City, City, 91 City Dump, The, 98

Did You Ever Go Fishing? 180

City Lights, 97 City, Oh, City! 89 Clickbeetle, 193

Donkey, The, 63 Don’t Ever Seize aWeasel by the Tail, 195

Cockpit in the Clouds, 99

Don’t Tell Me That ITalk Too

Cockroaches, 75 Codfish, The, 77 Colonel Fazackerley, 204

Don’t Worry if Your Job Is Small,

Dinky, 212 Doctor Emmanuel, 163 Dogs and Cats and Bears and Bats, 52-53

Much! 126 186

Double-Barreled Ding-Dong-Bat,

Beside the Line of Elephants, 59 Beyond Winter, 38 Birch Trees, 25 Blackbird, The, 83 Bliss, 66 Bluffalo, The, 191 Boa, The, 79 Bogeyman, The, 206 Bogus-Boo, The, 210 Bringing Up Babies, 135 Brontosaurus, 79 Broom Balancing, 122 Bubble Gum, 106 Buffalo Dusk, 58 Bug, The, 74

Common Cormorant, The, 171 Concrete Mixers, 94 Contrary Waiter, The, 173

104

C f

Dragonfly, A, 75 Dreams, 225 Driving to the Beach, 217

/Duck, The, 83 e

/ .■/

Ducks’ Ditty, 83 Duel, The, 174 Dust of Snow, 121

Eagle, The, 87 Easter, 42 Eat-it-all Elaine, 108 Egg Thoughts, 147 Eight Witches, 203

Eletelephony, 192 Elf and the Dormouse, The, 206

Every Time IClimb aTree, 119 Everybody Says, 125 Fairies, The, 207 Far Trek, 225 Father and Mother, 207 Father William, 182

Fatty, Fatty, Boom-a-latty, 165 Feather or Fur, 69 February Twilight, 39

Girls Can, Too! 111 Godmother, 161 Going Up, 140

ISaw aLittle Girl IHate, 103

Good-by My Winter Suit, 43 Grandpa Bear’s Lullaby, 60 Grandpa Dropped His Glasses,

Ice, 38 If No One Ever Marries Me, 121

159

Grandpapa, 159 Great Auk’s Ghost, The, 208 Green Candles, 201 Green Stems, 72 Ground Hog Day, 37

IWish ICould Meet the Man That

Knows, 134

If Once You Have Slept on an Island, 221 If We Didn’t Have Birthdays, 126 Fm Alone in the Evening, 142

I’m Glad the Sky Is Painted Blue, 22

I’m Hungry! 145

Feelings About Words, 197

Growing Old, 159

I’m Nobody! Who Are You? 128

Fernando, 109 Ferns, The, 25 Fireflies in the Garden, 76 First Snow, 31 First Tooth, The, 135 Fishes’ Evening Song, 78

Growing Up, 124 Gumble, 209

I’m Really Not Lazy, 127 In the Motel, 137

Hairy Dog, The, 64 Happy Thought, 216

I’ve Got aDog, 66

Flattered Flying Fish, The, 77

Hare and the Pig, The, 176 Harvest Home, 45

Jabberwocky, 170 Jack, 106 January, 36 Jessica Jane, 110 Jimmy Jet and His TV Set, 187 Jittery Jim, 162 John, 132 John, Tom, and James, 104 Johnnie Crack and Flossie Snail,

Flea, The, 74

Flight Plan, 223 Flint, 23 Flowers Are aSilly Bunch, 92

Fly and aFlea in aFlue, A, 190 Fog, 96 Foghorns, 98 Folk Who Live in Backward

Town, The, 181

Introduction to Songs of Habits of the Hippopotamus, 191

Have You Ever Seen? 195

Hedgehog, The, 56 Help! 136 Hen, The, 85 Herbert Glerbett, 187 Hey, Bug! 72

Higglety, Pigglety, Pop! 170 Hippopotamus, The, 58 His Highness’s Dog, 66 whist, 201 History, 127

Jonathan Bing, 163 Josephine, 181

Hog-Calling Competition, 163 Holding Hands, 58

Joyful, 44

Just Me, 120

How Strange It Is, 225

Ladybug, 76

How to Get There, 121 How to Tell Goblins from Elves,

Land of Potpourri, The, 215

Huckleberry, Gooseberry, Foul Shot, 220 Four Little Foxes, 60

J’s the Jumping Jay-Walker, 196 Just for One Day, 90

Inside, 131 Homework, 141 Homework, 141 Horseman, The, 200 Hot Line, 141 House. For Sale, 162

209

Football Game, A, 221

183

Joke, The, 102

hist

Home! You’re Where It’s Warm

Follow the Leader, 110

Innocence, 216

Raspberry, 103 Hug O’ War, 102

Hummingbird, The, 82 Hurt No Living Thing, 72

Four Seasons, 36

Four Seasons, The, 35 Freddy, 110 Frightening, 98 Frog, The, 81 From: AChristmas Package, 49 From aRailway Carriage, 224 From: The Bed Book, 217

IAm Cherry Alive, 127 IAm Rose, 118 IAsked My Mother, 178 ICan Fly, 123

Ghosts, 200

ILove You, 103

Gift with the Wrappings Off, 90

IRaised aGreat Hullabaloo, 150

IEat My Peas with Honey, 150 IHad aLittle Pig, 177 IHate Harry, 104 IHeard aBird Sing, 49

Keep aPoem in Your Pocket, 226 Keziah, 120 Knockout, The, 220

Last Rites, 24

Lazy Witch, 46 Leave Me Alone, 136 Leopard, 61 Lesser Lynx, The, 60 Let Others Share, 137 Library, The, 220 Light the Festive Candles, 48 Lil’ Bro’, 136 Lincoln, 37

Modern Hiawatha, The, 194 Moment in Summer, A, 44 Months, The, 36

Moon’s the North Wind’s Cooky,

Oh the Toe-Test! 74

Moses, 191

Oliphaunt, 59

Mother Doesn’t Want aDog, 133

On aBad Singer, 162 On Mother’s Day, 43 On the Bridge, 23 On the Ning Nang Nong, 171 On the Skateboard, 122

Mr. Bidery’s Spidery Garden, 192

Lion, The, 61

Little Bits of Soft-Boiled Egg, 149 Little Boy and the Old Man, The, 161

Little Clotilda, 111 Little Man, The, 209

Little Things, 69

Ode to Spring, 42 Ode to the Pig: His Tail, 64

The, 32 More It Snows, The, 30

Mother’s Nerves, 132 Mountain Brook, 28 Mountain Wind, 26

Lion, 61

October, 45 October, 45

Old Quin Queerihus, 163

Mr. Kartoffel, 165 Mr. Pratt, 152

One Day When We Went Walking,

Ms. Whatchamacallit

One Misty, Moisty Morning, 157 Oodles of Noodles, 147

Thingamajig, 211 Mud, 28 Muddy Puddle, The, 28 Mummy Slept Late and Daddy Fixed Breakfast, 147 My Brother, 136 My Brother Bert, 158

129

Open Hydrant, 96 Opposite of Two, The 167 Our House, 143

Our Washing Machine, 216 Owl, 202 Owl and the Pussy-Cat, The, 175

My Father Owns the Butcher Shop, 11 8

Paint Box, The, 226 Paper Dragons, 40

Lizard, The, 79 Lizard, The, 176 Lobsters and the Fiddler Crah, The, 171 Lone Dog, 65 Long Gone, 78

My My My My

Lord Cray, 167

Nature Is, 21

Pie Problem, 148

Love, 103

Lullahy, A, 114

New Vestments, The, 184 Night, 33

Pig, The, 64 Pig Is Never Blamed, A, 64

Lumps, 196

Night Comes, 33

Nonsense! Nonsense! 168

Pigeons, 95 Pizza, The, 152 Plumpuppets, The, 213 Poetry, 196 Polar Bear, 60 Polliwog, The, 82

Number Nine, Penwiper Mews,

Poor Old Lady, 164

maggie and milly and molly and may, 112 Mandrill, The, 63 Manners, 159 Maple Feast, 40 Maps, 221 March, 41 March Wind, The, 41

Little Sister, 149 Mouth, 146 Name Is ..., 118 Nose, 217

Myra Song, The, 137

Patience, 149

People, 156 People, The, 93

People Upstairs, The, 93

Performing Seal, The, 63

Night Heron, 86 Night Is aBig Black Cat, The, 33 No Girls Allowed, 111 No Holes Marred, 216

186

Praying Mantis, 73

Mark’s Fingers, 120 Marrog, The, 125

Martin Luther King, 37 Maytime Magic, 44

McIntosh Apple, 171 Me, 118 Me, 119 M E I A M ! 11 7

Measles, 113 Measurement, 23

Meg’s Egg, 148 Merry Christmas, 49

Message from aMouse, Ascending in aRocket, 224 Mice, 54

Middle of the Night, The, 143 Misnomer, 194

Miss Norma Jean Pugh, 160

230

Ptarmigan, The, 193 Puffin, The, 192

Pumberly Pott’s Unpredictable Niece, 186

Pumpkin, The, 208

Purple Cow, TTie, 178 Puzzle, 104

Soliloquy of aTortoise on Revisiting the Lettuce Beds After an Interval of One Hour

While Supposed to Be Sleeping in aClump of Blue Hollyhocks, 152

Solomon Grundy, 165 Some One, 200

Queen Nefertiti, 203 Queenie, 109 Question, 103

Some People, 156

Rabbit, The, 55 Rain Glouds, 30 Rain Has Silver Sandals, The, 29 Rainy Nights, 97 Read This with Gestures, 105

Somebody, 102 Something Is There, 200 Something Told the Wild Geese,

Some People IKnow, 155 Some Things Don’t Make Any Sense at All, 135

85

Song, 124

Reason ILike Chocolate, The, 119 Song of the Ogres, 205

Rhinos Purple, Hippos Green, 129 Song of the Witches, 202 Rhyme, 30

River Winding, 28 Riveter, The, 90 Rocket in My Pocket, A, 44

Roger the Dog, 65 Routine, 156

Rudolph Is Tired of the Gity, 92 Rules, 137 Runaway, The, 138

Spangled Pandemonium, The, 211 Sparrow Hawk, The, 87 Spring, 43 Spring Is, 42 Spring Rain, 42 Star, The, 33 Steam Shovel, 216 Stickball, 96

Stopping By Woods on aSnowy Evening, 31

Sad Song About Greenwich Village, A, 96

Story of Augustus Who Would Not Have Any Soup, The, 107

Three Ghostesses, 205 Tickle Rhyme, The, 76 Tin Frog, The, 217 Tired Tim, 109 To aSquirrel at Kyle-Na-No, 55 To an Aviator, 223 To Be Answered in Our Next

Issue, 219 To Be or Not to Be, 194

Samuel, 81

Stupid Old Myself, 125 Sugar Lady, The, 166

Sandpiper, The, 84 Sandpiper, The, 84

Sulk, 121

To Dark Eyes Dreaming, 226

Summer, 44

To Walk in Warm Ram, 30 Toad, The, 224 Toaster, The, 217 Together, 167 Tombstone, 162 Tomorrow’s the Fair, 146 Tony Baloney, 109 Too Many Daves, 161

Sally and Manda, 79

Sea, The, 29 Sea Gull, 84 Sea Shell, 29 Seal, 62

Secret Song, The, 24 Sensitive, Seldom and Sad, 181

Serpent, The, 176 Seven Ages of Elf-hood, The, 208 Shark, The, 78 Shark, The, 177 Silver, 33 Since Hanna Moved Away, 114 Sing aSong of People, 95

Sing aSong of Subways, 92 Sing Me aSong of Teapots and Trumpets, 193 Sir Smasham Uppe, 167 Six Weeks Old, 135 Slithergadee, 209 Sloth, The, 56 Smart, 157

Smells, 39 Snail’s Dream, The, 183 Sneaky Bill, 153 Snowflake, The, 32 Soap, 138

Sunning, 66 Sunrise, 93 Surprises, 126 Table Manners, 106

Tag Along, 105 Taste of Purple, 148 Ten Kinds, 105 Tender-heartedness, 186

Thanksgiving, 47 Thanksgiving Day, 47 Thanksgiving Magic, 46 That May Morning, 93 There Was aLittle Girl, 105 There Was an Old Man with a

Beard, 163 They’re Calling, 139 They’ve All Gone South, 95

Things to Do If You Are aSubway, 92

This Is Halloween, 46 This Is Just to Say, 146 This Little Pig Built aSpaceship, 225

Thoughts on Talkers, 157 Thousand Hairy Savages, A, 150

231

To o t ! To o t ! 1 7 0

Train Song, 222 Travel, 223

Tree Frog, The, 82 Trees, 24

Troll, The, 206

Way Down South, 173

Turtle Soup, 146

Ways of Living Things, The, 71

Tutor, The, 190 12 October, 46 Twickham Tweer, 151 Twins, The, 183 Two People, 105 Two People, 143 Two Witches, 190

Wearing of the Green, 41 Weather, 190 Wee Little Worm, A, 77 Wendigo, The, 207 Wendy in Winter, 109

Windy Nights, 27

What Is Red? 219

What Someone Said When He Was

Wolf Cry, The, 24

Walk, 111

What Is Orange? 218 What Is Pink? 218

Spanked on the Day Before His Birthday, 139 What’s That? 201

Valentine, 38

When, 40

Visit from St. Nicholas, A, 50

When All the World Is Full of

Vulture, The, 86

Snow, 31 When 1Was Lost, 120

Waiters, 195 Waking, 133 Walrus, The, 178 Waltzer in the House, The, 54 Wanted—A Witch’s Cat, 202 Washington, 39 Wasps, 74 Water’s Edge, 28

Wild Flowers, 195 Wild, the Free, The, 63 Wind, The, 26 Wind-Wolves, 26 Winning of the TV West, The, 142 Winter Clothes, 128 Winter Moon, 48 Witch! The Witch!, The, 202 Witches’ Menu, 203 Wolf..., A, 121 Wolf, The, 59

We’re Racing, Racing down the What in the World ?114

Umbilical, 93 Uncle, 159 Unicorn, 209 Universe, The, 22 Until 1Saw the Sea, 29 Up in the Pine, 140

Wiggly Giggles, 113

When Mosquitoes Make aMeal, 7 4

Where Are You Now? 98

Where Goblins Dwell, 198 Who Has Seen the Wind? 27

Whoops! 173 Who’s In, 219 Why Run? 106

Word, A, 196 Worm, The, 151 Wrestling, 112 Wnmples, 210 Wrong Start, The, 132 Yak, The, 197 Yawning, 128 Yellow, 220

Yip-yap Rattletrap, 105 You Must Never Bath in an Irish

Stew, 180

Young Lady of Lynn, A, 187 Zebra, 93

INDEX OF FIRST FINES !a

4 .

Ablue day, 41 Abug sat in asilver flower, 73 Abull-voiced young fellow of Pawling, 163 Acat in despondency sighed, 67 Acold and starry darkness moans, 200 Afly and aflea in aflue, 190

Attention, architect! 224

Augustus was achubby lad, 107 Bats are creepy; bats are scary, 56

Ahorse and aflea and three blind mice, 173

Be kind and tender to the Frog, 81 Be wary of the loathsome troll, 206 Beautiful Soup, so rich and green, 146

Aleaf hug comes from an egg in June, 75

Because of the steepness, 28

Alittle seed, 44

Because we do, 167 Before Imelt, 32

Amajor, with wonderful force, 195 Amoment in summer, 44

Behold the wonders of the mighty deep, 29 Apeanut sat on arailroad track, 170 Billy, in one of his new sashes, 186 Apig is never blamed in case, 64 Bouncing! bouncing! on the beds, 137 Asilver-scaled Dragon with jaws flaming red, 217 Brown and furry, 76 Asmall speckled visitor, 76 By day the bat is cousin to the mouse, 56 Asnail, who had away it seems, 183

Asummer day is full of ease, 44

“Canary-birds feed on sugar and seed, 57

Asweet, adelicate white mouse, 54 Atarsier worked as awaiter, 173 Athousand hairy savages, 150 Atreacherous monster is the Shark, 78 Atutor who tootled the flute, 190 Awee little worm in ahickory-nut, 77 Awolf, 121 Aword is dead, 196

Catch afloater, catch an eel, 180 Cats and kittens, kittens and cats, 68

Algy met ahear, 178 All along the backwater, 83 All things bright and beautiful, 22 Alligator pie, alligator pie, 180 Allow me just one short remark, 79 Along aroad, 30 Along the sea-edge, like agnome, 84 Amelia mixed the mustard, 133

Cats sleep, 68 Celery, raw, 148 Children, children everywhere, 101 Chocolate cake, 148 Chocolate Easter bunny, 149 City asleep, 98 City, city, 91 City, oh. City, 89 Click beetle, 193 “Cobalt and umber and ultramarine, 226

Colonel Fazackerley Butterworth-Toast, 204 Come play with me, 55 Come take up your hats, and away let us haste, 172 Crickets, 73

An emerald is as green as grass, 23

Crowds pushing, 94

And here’s the happy, bounding flea, 74 And I’m thinking how to get out, 127 And when the rain had gone away, 74

Curious fly, 74

Antonio, Antonio, 191

Arithmetic is where numbers fly, 218 As Iwas walking up the stair, 209 As long as Ilive, 118 Asleep he wheezes at his ease, 65 At last year’s Jungle Olympics, 177

At the edge of the tide, 84

Daddy fixed the breakfast, 147

Dead in the cold, asong-singing thrush, 24 Did Iever tell you that Mrs. McCave, 161

Did you ever go fishing on abright sunny day, 180 Dining with his older daughter, 195 Do alley cats go, 96 Do not jump on ancient uncles, 137

Do you hear the cry as the pack goes by, 26 Do you love me, 103

Doctor Emmanuel Harrison-Hyde, 163 Don’t tell me that Italk too much! 126

Don’t waste your time in looking for, 78 Don’t worry if your job is small, 186 Double, double toil and trouble, 202 Dreams go fast and far, 226 Goblins on the doorstep, 46 Good afternoon. Sir Smasham Uppe! 167 Good-by my winter suit, 43 Got me aspecial place, 37 Grandpa dropped his glasses once, 159 Grandpapa fell down adrain, 159 Grapes hang purple, 148

Eat no green apples or you’ll droop, 102

Eight witches rode the midnight sky, 203 Elephants walking, 58 Eons ago, when the earth was still yeasty, 61 Every time Iclimb atree, 119

Everybody says, 125 Everyone grumbled. The sky was gray, 156

Gray as amouse, 59 Green is go, 220

Faster than fairies, faster than witches, 224 Fatty, Fatty, Boom-a-latty, 165 Fernando has abasketball, 109

Ground Hog sleeps, 37

Firemen, firemen! 136

Having little kids around, they say, is truly bliss, 106 He clasps the crag with crooked hands, 87

Have you ever seen asheet on ariver bed? 195

Flip flop, 78 Flowers are asilly bunch, 92 For printed instructions, 216

He comes from afar, 162 He is so small, he does not know, 135

From Number Nine, Penwiper Mews, 186 From where Istand now, 46

He killed the noble Mudjokivis, 194

Full of oatmeal, 160

Herbert Glerbett, rather round, 187 Here come the real stars to fill the upper skies, 76 Here is the story, 110

He played by the river when he was young, 39

Here it comes! 98

Here lies, 162

Here we come again, again, and here we come again! 48

Hey, bug, stay! 72 Hey, sidewalk pacers, 90 Higglety, pigglety, pop! 170 High adventure, 221 High, high in the branches, 25 hist

whist, 201 Hold fast to dreams, 225 Home! You are aspecial place, 131

Homework sits on top of Sunday, squashing Sunday flat, 141 How doth the little crocodile, 81

How thin and sharp is the moon tonight! 48

Huckleberry, gooseberry, raspberry pie, 103 Humps are lumps, 196

Hunting my cat along the evening brook, 86 Hurt no living thing, 72 2Sk

i, 149

Imade peanut butter sandwiches, 138

Iam acamel in all the sand, 57

Inever know, 31 Inever saw aPurple Cow, 178

“I am cherry alive,” the little girl said, 127 Iam his Highness’s dog at Kew, 66

1raised agreat hullabaloo, 150

Iam Rose my eyes are blue, 118 Iam sitting, 28 1am the cat of cats. 1am, 67 Iam the old one here, 80

Isaw adonkey, 63

Isaw alittle girl 1hate, 103

Iam the only me iam, 117 Iasked my mother for fifty cents, 178 Ican fly, of course, 123 Ican get through adoorway without any key, 26 Icome to work as well as play, 41 Ido not like the way you slide, 147

Isaw on the snow, 49 Iscuff, 121 Isometimes think I’d rather crow, 194 1stood beside ahill, 39 Ithink mice, 54

Ithink they had no pattern, 59 Ithought I’d win the spelling bee, 193 Iwent away last August, 108

Ieat my peas with honey, 150 Ieat what Iwish, 69 Ifound this salamander, 81 Igo, 121

Iwent to the animal fair, 178

Igot avalentine from Timmy, 38 Igot up this morning and meant to be good, 132 Ihad alittle pig, 177

If babies could speak they’d tell mother or nurse,

Ihate Harry like ... like ... OOO! 104

If Ieat one more piece of pie. I’ll die! 148

Ihave asecret place to go, 120

If no one ever marries me, 121

Ihave an uncle Idon’t like, 159 Ihave eaten, 146

If once you have slept on an island, 221 If we didn’t have birthdays, you wouldn’t be you.

Iwill not play at tug o’ war, 102 Iwish Icould meet the man that knows, 134 I’d much rather sit there in the sun, 124

Ihave hopped, when properly wound up, the whole length, 217 1have to take my little brother, 136 Iheard abird sing, 49 Iheard ahorseman, 200 Iknow what /feel like, 102

135

If Icould see little fish, 23

126

If you’ve ever been one, 194

I’ll tell you the story of Jimmy Jet, 187 I’m alean dog, akeen dog, awild dog and lone, 65 I’m alone in the evening, 142 I’m by myself, 140

Ilike my fingers, 120 Ilike the town on rainy nights, 97

I’m glad the sky is painted blue, 22 I’m hungry, so Ithink I’ll take, 145

1like to see athunder storm, 30

I’m in trouble, 106

Ilike wrestling with Herbie because, 112 “I look and smell,” Aunt Sponge declared, lovely as arose! 166

Ilove noodles. Give me oodles, 147 Ilove you, Ilike you, 103

1love you, Ilove you, 103

I’m nobody! Who are you? 128 ■a s

I’m really not lazy, 127

I’m shouting, 43 I’m Sneaky Bill, I’m terrible mean and vicious, 153

In and out the bushes, up the ivy, 55 In days of old, those far off times, 224

235

Little things that crawl and creep, 72 Little things, that run, and quail, 69 Live lizard; dead lizard, 203

Look at itsy-bitsy Mitzi! 152 Loving care! 136

maggie and milly and molly and may, 112 Mammals are avaried lot, 52

McIntosh apple, 171 Meg, 148

In February there are days, 40

Millicent can play the flute, 122

In form and feature, face and limb, 183 In March, kites bite the wind, 40

Moses supposes his toeses are roses, 191

In moving-slow he has no Peer, 56

Mr. Kartoffel’s awhimsical man, 165 Mr. Pratt has never left, 152

Mother doesn’t want adog, 133

In October, 45

Ms. Whatchamacallit Thingamajig, 211

In Spring when maple buds are red, 41 In the desolate depths of aperilous place, 206

Mud is very nice to feel, 28 My best friend’s name is Billy, 104 My brother’s worth about two cents, 136 My dad gave me one dollar bill, 157 My desk’s at the back of the class, 125

In the far corner, 83 In the Mandrill, 63

In the morning the city, 98 In the sky, 225

My dog’s so furry I’ve not seen, 64 My father owns the butcher shop, 118 My father’s name is Frankenstein, 207

In wildest woods, on treetop shelves, 205 Into the bit-flaked sugar-snow, 40 Into the endless dark, 97 Isabel met an enormous bear, 179 Isn’t it strange some people make, 156 It appeared inside our classroom, 212 It doesn’t breathe, 217

My little sister, 149 My mom says I’m her sugarplum, 135 My mother said, “If just once more, 132 My name is Sluggery-wuggery, 118 “My nose is blue, 119

It isn’t proper, Iguess you know, 105 It looks like any building, 220 It ought to come in April, 41 It’s the might, it’s the fight, 221 I’ve got adog as thin as arail, 66 I’ve got arocket, 44

I’ve got the wiggly-wiggles today, 113 Jane won’t touch acaterpillar, 106 January brings the snow, 36 Jessica Jane is the kind of cook, 110 John could take his clothes off, 132

John was abad boy, and beat apoor cat, 104 Johnnie Crack and Flossie Snail, 183

Josephine, Josephine, 181 J’s the Jumping Jay-walker, 196 My secret way of waking, 133

Just look at those hands! 138

My sister says, 129 My stocking’s where, 49 My tail is not impressive, 64 Myra, Myra, sing-song, 137

Keep apoem in your pocket, 226 Lazy witch, 46 Let me fetch sticks, 66

Nature is the endless sky, 21 Night comes, 33 No matter what we are and who, 156

Let others share your toys, my son, 137 Let the rain kiss you, 97

Light the first of eight tonight, 48 Little bits of soft-boiled egg, 149

No wonder Wendy’s coat blew off, 109 Nobody sees what Ican see, 120 Nonsense.^ That’s what makes no sense, 168

Little Clotilda, 111

Little fellow, you’re amusing, 205

2S6

Olittle soldier with the golden helmet, 25 Ospring, Ospring, 42 Owhat’s the weather in aBeard, 212

October turned my maple’s leaves to gold, 45 Of all the ways of traveling in earth and air and sea. 223

“Of what are you afraid, my child,” inquired the kindly teacher, 195 Oh, do not tease the Bluffalo, 191 Oh, take my hand and stroll with me, 215

Oh, the Polliwog is woggling, 82 Oh, what alark to fish for shark, 177

Oh, what can you do with aChristmas pup, 90 Old Dog lay in the summer sun, 66 Old Quin Queeribus, 163

On Midsummer night the witches shriek, 202 On Mother’s Day we got up first, 43 On the Ning Nang Nong, 171 On the road, 217 Onc( 1didn’t mean to, 150

Once there was an elephant, 192 One cannot have enough, 152 One day when we went walking, 129 One misty, moisty morning, 157 Orange is atiger lily, 218

Our daughter, Alicia, 141 Our house is small, 143

Our washing machine went whisity whirr, 216 Out in back, 222

Over the river and through the wood, 47 Over the winter glaciers, 38 Pets are the hobby of my brother Bert, 158 Pigeons are city folk, 95

Piping down the valleys wild, 216 Poised between going on and back, pulled, 219 Poor old Jonathan Bing, 163 Poor old lady, she swallowed afly, 164 Poor old Mr. Bidery, 192 Poor tired Tim! It’s sad for him, 109

Pretend you are adragon, 92 Pumberly Pott’s unpredictable niece, 186 Queenie’s strong and Queenie’s tall, 109

Rain falling, what things do you grow? 28 Red is asunset, 219 Redbird, bluebird, 95

Said the little boy, “Sometimes Idrop my spoon. 161

Said the Shark to the Flying Fish over the phone, 77 Sally and Manda are two little lizards, 79 Sea Shell, Sea Shell, 29 See how he dives, 62 Sensitive, Seldom and Sad are we, 181

She lives in agarret, 96 She reads the paper, 143 Shed atear for Twickham Tweer, 151

Sing asong of people, 95 Sing asong of subways, 92 Sing me asong, 193 Sing song, 105

Skimming, 122 Slowly, silently, now the moon, 33 Snow makes whiteness where it falls, 31

Solomon Grundy, 165 Some day, 139 Some one came knocking, 200

Some people Iknow like to chatter, 155 Some people talk and talk, 156 Some people talk in atelephone, 157 Some things will never change although, 225 Some words clink, 197

Somebody loves you deep and true, 102 Something is there, 200

Something told the wild geese, 85 Sometimes—I’m sorry—but sometimes, 128 Space-Suit Sammy, 140 Speak gently. Spring, and make no sudden sound, 6 0

Speak roughly to your little boy, 114 Spin acoin, spin acoin, 203

Spring is showery, flowery, bowery, 36 Spring is when, 42 Stars and atoms have no size, 23 stays shut, 146

Stupid old myself today, 125

237

Surprises are round, 126

Swans sing before they die—’twere no bad thing, 162

Thank You, 47

Thanksgiving Day Ilike to see, 46 That May morning—very early, 93 That praying mantis over there, 73 That’s Jack, 106

The air is like abutterfly, 42 The alligator chased his tail, 176 The ants are walking under the ground, 93 The Arctic moon hangs overhead, 24 The black cat yawns, 68 The Bogus-boo, 210 The broomstick bat, 96

The buffaloes are gone, 58 The busy ant works hard all day, 74 The centipede is not complete, 122 The city YAWNS, 93

The codfish lays ten thousand eggs, 77 The common cormorant or shag, 171 The cow is of the bovine ilk, 64 The cow mainly moos as she chooses to moo, 190 The days are short, 36 Tlie dinosaurs are not all dead, 216 “The door is shut fast, 219 The doors are locked, 162

The drivers are washing the concrete mixers, 94 The earth is warm, the sun’s ablaze, 35 The few times back in the early fall, 113 The fledglings have alanguage, 82 The fly, the fly, 74 The fog comes, 96 The foghorns moaned, 98 The folk who live in Backward Town, 181 The giant brontosaurus, 79 The gingham dog and the calico cat, 174

The Goblin has awider mouth, 209 The golden crocus reaches up, 25 The Goops they lick their fingers, 106 The Great Auk’s ghost rose on one leg, 208 The Gumble lives behind the door, 209 The Hedgehog sleeps beneath the hedge, 56 The hen is aferocious fowl, 85

The hippopotamus is strong, 191 The huge hippopotamus hasn’t ahair, 58 The Hummingbird, he has no song, 82 The joke you just told isn’t funny one bit, 102 The laughter of the Lesser Lynx, 60 The lion has agolden mane, 61 The lion, ruler over all the beasts, 61

The Lizard is atimid thing, 79 The lobsters came ashore one night, 171 The maples flare among the spruces, 45 The Moon’s the North Wind’s cooky, 32 The more it, 30

The Night is abig black cat, 33 The night is coming softly, slowly, 33 The night is long, 60 The night is white, 25

The Night was creeping on the ground! 32 The Oak is called the king of trees, 24 The Owl and the Pussy-cat went to sea, 175 The people upstairs all practice ballet, 93 The pig is not anervous beast, 64

The ptarmigan is strange, 193 The railroad track is miles away, 223 The rain has silver sandals, 29 The reason Ilike chocolate, 119

The sea gull curves his wings, 84 The secret of the polar bear, 60 The shortest fight, 220 The sight of his guests filled Lord Cray, 167 The Slithergadee has crawled out of the sea, 209 The snail, who had away, it seems, 183 The song of canaries, 83 The Spangled Pandemonium, 211 The sprinkler twirls, 45

The storm came up so very quick, 42 The Time to Tickle aLizard, 176 The tires on my bike are flat, 114

The tree frog, 82 The Unicorn with the long white horn, 209 The Vulture eats between his meals, 86

-The Walrus lives on icy floes, 178 The way acrow, 121

The Wendigo, 207 The Witch! the Witch! don’t let her get you! 202

The world is so full of anumber of things, 216 There is aplace where goblins dwell, 198 There is wonder past all wonder, 71 There is an old lady who lives down the hall, 166 There is the moon, there is the sun, 22

There lived an old man in the Kingdom of Tess, 184 There was aboy of other days, 37 There was alittle girl, who had alittle curl, 105 There was aSerpent who had to sing, 176

&

There was awitch, 190

There was ayoung lady of Lynn, 187 There was an old lady, 161 There was an Old Man with abeard, 163 There were once two cats of Kilkenny, 67 There’s room in the bus, 162

When an Elf is as old as ayear and aminute, 208 When Iget big, 123

“There’s someone at the door,” said gold

When Igrow old Ihope to be, 159

candlestick, 201 These are the Beds, 217

When Iwas seven, 124 When it’s hot, 44

These buildings are too close to me, 92 They’re calling, “Nan, 139 This is asong to be sung at night, 143 This little pig built aspaceship, 225

When little heads weary have gone to their bed, 213 When mosquitoes make ameal, 75 when spanky goes, 123

This worker is afearless one, 90

Three little ghostesses, 205 Through all the frozen winter, 39 Through the house what busy joy, 135 To see aWorld in agrain of sand, 22 To walk in warm rain, 30

When the clock strikes five but it’s only four, 210 When the earth is turned in spring, 151

When the hare and the pig had some pleasure to plan, 176 When the heat of summer, 75

When the night begins to fall, 98 When the pale moon hides and the wild wind wails.

Tomorrow’s the fair, 146

Tony Baloney is fibbing again, 109 Tony said: “Boys are better! Ill ’Twas brillig, and the slithy toves, 170 ’Twas the night before Christmas, when all through the house, 50 Twinkle, twinkle little star, 33

Two people live in Rosamund, 105 Two thousand feet beneath our wheels, 99

59

When they said the time to hide was mine, 55 When twilight comes to Prairie Street, 142 When we’re playing tag. 111 When Winter scourged the meadow and the hill, 38 When you visit the barber, 113 When you watch for, 69 When you’re aDuck like me it’s impossible, 83

Uncle, whose inventive brains, 159

Whenever the moon and stars are set, 27 Whether the weather be fine, 190 white sun, 93

Under atoadstool, 206

Who has seen the wind? 27

Under my hood Ihave ahat, 128

Who is so proud, 63 Who saw the petals, 24 “Who’s that tickling my back?” said the wall, 76

Underneath my belt, 120 Until Isaw the sea, 29 Up the airy mountain, 207

Upon this cake of ice is perched, 192 Wanted—a witch’s cat, 202

Wasps like coffee, 74 Water rushes up, 96 Wave swashes, 28

Way down South where bananas grow, 173 We’re racing, racing down the walk. 111 What in the world, 114 What is it about homework, 141

What is pink? Arose is pink, 218 What is poetry? Who knows? 196 What is the opposite of two} 167 What ran under arosebush? 213

Whose woods these are Ithink Iknow, 31 Why, 104 Windrush down the timber chutes, 26

Wings like pistols flashing at his sides, 87 Winnie Whiney, all things grieve her, 105 With flowing tail, and flying mane, 63 With two 60’s stuck on the scoreboard, 220 Words can be stuffy, as sticky as glue, 188

Yickity-yackity, yickity-yak, 197 Yip-yap Rattletrap, 105 “You are old, Father William,” the young man said, 182

You can take away my mother, 93 You may not believe it, for hardly could I, 208

W h a t ’s t h a t ? 2 0 1

You must never bath in an Irish Stew, 180 You should never squeeze aweasel, 195

When agreat tree falls, 219

You who have grown so intimate with stars, 223

Whatever he does, you have to do too, 110

239

p^-

-INDEX OF AUTHORS

g ’ . f . / , ' f t r. - r - 1 - r r a , 3 : - r.

Adoff, Arnold, 146,149 Aiken, Conrad, 63

Aldis, Dorothy, 40, 74,120,125, 2 1 7

Aldrich, Thomas Bailey, 45 Alexander, Cecil Frances, 22 Alexander, John T, 142 Allen, Marie Louise, 31

Allingham, William, 207 Alma-Tadema, Laurence, 121 Anglund, Joan Walsh, 76

Chaikin, Miriam, 104, 211 Child, L. Maria, 47 Chute, Marchette, 42,132 Ciardi,John, 105,134,137,139, 147

11 8 , 2 0 0

De Regniers, Beatrice Schenk, 33, 226

Clark, G. Orr, 33 Clark, Leonard, 162 Clarke, Pauline, 118 Coatsworth, Elizabeth, 28,30,41, 68,84

Anthony, Edward, 102,137

Cole, Joanna, 217 Cole, William, 106,153,193

Asch, Frank, 44, 93, 96,166 Asquith, Herbert, 64 Auden, WH., 205

Coleridge, Sara, 24, 36 Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, 162

Baro, Gene, 25 Barrows, Marjorie, 74 Baylor, Byrd, 80 Becker, Edna, 59 Becker, John, 69

Dahl, Roald, 166 De la Mare, Walter, 32,33,109,

Conkling, Hilda, 25 Counselman, Mary Elizabeth, 90 Covell, Natalie Anne, 113 Crane, Walter, 25 Crossen, Stacy Jo, 113 Cummings, e. e., 112, 201

Deutsch, Babette, 64 Dickinson, Emily, 128,196 Digance, Richard, 83,177

Dodge, Mary Mapes, 105 Dorrance, Dick, 99 Douglas, Lord Alfred, 78, 85

Douglass, Suzanne, 216 Dugan, Michael, 209 Dunann, Louella, 141 Durston, Georgia Roberts, 59

Eastwick, Ivy O., 47 Emerson, Ralph Waldo, 38

Engle, Paul, 167 Farber, Norma, 74 Farjeon, Eleanor, 48, 66, 68, 75, 128,196,202

Behn, Harry, 124,200 Bell, J.J, 56, 79,177 Belloc, Hilaire, 81, 86 Bennett, Rowena Bastin, 46 Bergengren, Ralph, 151

Field, Eugene, 174 Field, Rachel, 63, 85, 97,156, 208,221

Bishop, Morris, 163

Fisher, Aileen, 41,43,48,49 Flanders, Michael, 82,178

Blake, William, 22,216 Bodecker, N. M., 31,43,132,193 Boyden, Polly Chase, 28 Brady, June, 225 Bridgman, L. J., 176

Fleming, Elizabeth, 219 Forster, Frederick J., 171 Francis, Robert, 219 Fraser, Kathleen, 110,112,122 Frost, Frances, 40, 84, 86 Frost, Robert, 31, 76,121 Fufuka, Karama, 123,136

Brooks, Gwendolyn, 92,120 Brooks, Walter R., 42, 64, 74,157 Brown, Beatrice Curtis, 163 Brown, Margaret Wise, 24, 72 Brown, Palmer, 211 Brownjohn, Alan, 57 Burgess, Gelett, 106,178 Burgunder, Rose, 44 Bynner, Witter, 84 Byron, Lord, 63

Fuller, Roy, 135 Fyleman, Rose, 54 Gardner, John, 79 Gardner, Martin, 113,138 Giovanni, Nikki, 119,123 Goodrich, Samuel, 170 Gorey, Edward, 167, 186

Campbell, Alice B., 79 Carroll, Lewis, 81,114,146,170,

Graham, Harry, 159,186 Grahame, Kenneth, 83 Graves, Robert, 208 Greenaway, Kate, 23 Guiterman, Arthur, 45, 82, 156,191

182

Carryl, Charles Edward, 57 Causley, Charles, 204

2J^0

Hearn, Michael Patrick, 129

Heid.e, Florence Parry, 201 Henderson, Rose, 159

Herford, Oliver, 49,183,206

Hicky, Daniel \)^itehead, 223 Hillert, Margaret, 120,122 Hoban, Russell, 87,125,141, 147,217

Hobbs, Valine, 129

Hoberman, Mary Ann, 33, 73, 102,148,181,193,195

Hodgson, Ralph, 208 Hoey, Edwin A., 220 Hoffmann, Heinrich, 107

Holman, Felice, 98,121,123,136, 139

Hopkins, Lee Bennett, 111 Housman, A. E., 133

Hubbell, Patricia, 94,216, 224 Huff, Barbara A., 220

Hughes, Langston, 48, 97,98,225 Hughes, Ted, 65,158 Hymes, Lucia M. and James L., Jr., 147,162 Ipcar, Dahlov, 78

Lenski, Lois, 95 Lewis, Claudia, 98,225

Lindsay, Vachel, 32 Link, Lenore M., 58 Livingston, Myra Cohn, 37,46, 127,152

Long, Elizabeth-Ellen, 30 Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth, 105

Loots, Barbara Kunz, 26 Lowell, Amy, 29

Isherwood, Christopher, 171 Jackson, Leroy E, 159,180 Jacobs, Frank, 56 Jacobs, LelandB., 93,109,148 Jarrell, Randall, 55 Justus, May, 29,110

Macdonald, Mary, 176 Malam, Charles, 216 Maschler, Fay, 149 McCord, David, 30,49,119,192,

Oliver, Robert S., 224 O’Neill, Mary, 120,160,197, 218,219

Osage Indian, 121 Park, Frances, 96 Parker, Edgar, 173

Payne, Nina, 105,106,148 Peake, Mervyn, 181 Plath, Sylvia, 217

Pope, Alexander, 66 Prelutsky, Jack, 21, 35,52,58, 61, 71,78,89,101,111,117,131, 145,151,155,168,186,187, 188,190,195,197,198,205, 206,210,212,215

220

McGee, Shelagh, 202

McGinley, Phyllis, 41, 111, 196 Katz, Bobbi, 42, 81, 92,138,149

Kennedy, X. J., 132,136,137,207 Kilmer, Joyce, 42 Krauss, Ruth, 124 Kredenser, Gail, 60, 79 Kreps, Gretchen, 61 Kroll, Steven, 171 Kumin, Maxine W, 150 Kunitz, Stanley, 54 Kuskin, Karla, 43, 73,119,128, 137,143

Lamb, Charles and Mary, 135 Lear, Edward, 163,175, 184 Lee, B.J.,203 Lee, Dennis, 28,104,109,110, 180

1

Leigh, Henry S., 183

McLeod, Irene, 65 Mearns, Hughes, 209 Merchant, Jane, 223 Merriam, Eve, 92, 93,114,143, 194

Millay, Edna St. Vincent, 223 Miller, Mary Britton, 22, 68, 95, 98

Milligan, Spike, 150,171,180 Milne, A. A., 30 Minarik, Else Holmelund, 75 Moore, Clement Clarke, 50 Moore, John Travers, 82,140 Moore, Lilian, 29, 37, 72, 95, 98, 133,200

Morden, Phyllis B., 161 Moreland, John Richard, 25 Morley, Christopher, 135, 213 Morrison, Lillian, 28, 90,122, 162,220

Nash, Ogden, 64, 83, 93,148, 152,179, 207

Newell, Peter, 195 Nikolay, Sonja, 203 Nims, Bonnie, 121

Noyes, Alfred, 156

21^1 k

Rands, William Brighty, 67 Read, Sylvia, 202 Reeves, James, 26,163,165,210 Resnikoff, Alexander, 181, 190 Richards, Laura E., 191,192 Ridlon, Marci, 91, 96,109,136 Rieu, E. V., 60, 77,105,152,167, 226

Riley, James Whitcomb, 77

Roberts, Charles G. D., 38 Roberts, Elizabeth Madox, 55, 93 Roethke, Theodore, 56,176,212 Roscoe, William, 172 Rosen, Michael, 142 Ross, Charles Henry, 104,106 Rossetti, Christina, 23,24, 27, 72, 76,218

Smith, William Jay, 61, 62,103, 162,209,217

Snyder, Zilpha Keatley, 226 Soule, Jean Conder, 126 Spilka, Arnold, 92,103,104,126, 127

Starbird, Kaye, 75,108,109,113 Stein, Gertrude, 118

Stephens, James, 32, 69 Sandburg, Carl, 58, 96, 218

Stevenson, Robert Louis, 27,216,

Sarett, Lew, 24, 60

2 2 4

Stewart, Anna Bird, 82 Strong, George A., 194 Sullivan, A. M., 23

Sargent, William D., 26 Schmeltz, Susan M., 40

Schonborg, Virginia, 94, 96 Schwartz, Delmore, 127 Scriven, R. C., 125 Sendak, Maurice, 45 Serraillier, Ian, 76 Seuss, Dr., 126,161 Shakespeare, William, 202 Shannon, Monica, 209,213 Shaw, Richard, 69 Siebert, Diane, 222 Silverstein, Shel, 38,102,148, 157,161,187,209

Smaridge, Norah, 106

Taylor, Jane, 33 Teasdale, Sara, 39 Tennyson, Alfred, 87 Thomas, Dylan, 183

Thompson, Dorothy Brown, 46, 143,221

Thompson, Irene, 97 Thurman, Judith, 93,196 Tippett, James S., 66 Tolkien, J.R.R., 59

Turner, Nancy Byrd, 37, 39,163

f

y

/

21^2

Updike, John, 36,45 Van Eck, Alice, 221 Van Rensselaer, Mariana Griswold, 159 Viorst,Judith, 114,133,135 Watson, Glyde, 103,105 Watson, Nancy Dingman, 140 Watts, Mabel, 44, 90 Wells, Garolyn, 190 Wilbur, Richard, 167 Williams, William Garbs, 146 Winsor, Frederick, 225 Wise, William, 149 Wolfe, Humbert, 83,201 Wood, Robert Williams, 192 Worth, Kathryn, 39 Worth, Valerie, 73 Yeats, William Butler, 55 Yolen,Jane, 60,141,191 Young, Roland, 64, 74 Zolotow, Charlotte, 28,44,156

SUBJECT INDEX